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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.

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Swallow (Utah, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
b's 1 13 14   14 14 28   Seventh. Aug., ‘61 3d Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. Ginn's 1 10 11   18 18 29 Mower's Sixteenth. Sept., ‘61 4th Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. Bush's   12 12 1 15 16 28 Sheridan's Fourth. Nov., ‘61 5th Ind. Simonson's 1 11 12   24 24 36 Stanley's Fourth. Sept., ‘61 6th Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. Mueller's 1 1 2   15 15 17   Fifteenth. Dec., ‘61 7th Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. Swallow's 1 6 7   22 22 29 Baird's Fourteenth. Jan., ‘62 8th Ind. Estep's   5 5   10 10 15 T. J. Wood's Twenty-first. Feb., ‘62 9th Ind. Thompson's   6 6   55 55 61 Mower's Sixteenth. Jan., ‘62 10th Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. Naylor's   5 5   22 22 27 Newton's Fourth. Dec., ‘61 11th Ind. Sutermeister's   6 6 1 18 19 25 Sheridan's Twentieth. Jan., ‘62 12th Ind. Reenlisted and served through the war. White's       2 22 24 24
Champion's Hill (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
irie Grove, 500 killed, 154 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 13 missing; the 22d, at Resaca, 11 killed, 56 wounded, and 1 missing; the 29th, at Champion's Hill, 19 killed, 92 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 2 missing, and, at Port Gibson, 10 killed and 65 wounded. The 11th Wisconsin Battery was also k Iuka 37 179 1 217 22d Iowa Vicksburg 27 118 19 164 6th Iowa Shiloh 52 94 37 183 23d Iowa Big Black 13 88   101 7th Iowa Belmont 51 127 49 227 24th Iowa Champion's Hill 35 120 34 189 9th Iowa Pea Ridge 38 176 4 218 26th Iowa Arkansas Post 18 99   117 10th Iowa Champion's Hill 36 131   167 32d Iowa Pleasant Hill 35 117 5Champion's Hill 36 131   167 32d Iowa Pleasant Hill 35 117 56 208 11th Iowa Shiloh 33 160 1 194 39th Iowa Allatoona 40 52 78 170 There were only three missing numbers in the Iowa line. The 41st was a battalion which was transferred to the 7th Iowa Cavalry. The 42d and 43d Regiments failed to complete their organizations. Missouri.--The losses of the Missouri regiments were sev
Hudson (New Jersey, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
1862; the 101st was transferred to the 37th in December, 1862; the 145th was disbanded December 9, 1863, and distributed to the 107th, 123d, and 150th Regiments; and the 163d was transferred to the 73d on January 20, 1863. The 190th and 191st were sm ill battalions which did not leave the State, the war ending soon after their organization was commenced. New Jersey.--The record of the Jerseymen in the war shows that they were true to the patriotic memories of Princeton and Monmouth. The Jersey troops became conspicuous early in the war by reason of the First and Second Jersey Brigades; in fact, any history of the Army of the Potomac would be incomplete and deficient were it without frequent mention of those gallant commands. The First Jersey Brigade, proper, consisted of the 1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th New Jersey, to which the 15th was added in 1862; the 10th, 23d, and 40th were also attached at various times. It was commanded successively by Generals Kearny, Taylor, Torbert, Colonel B
Cincinnati (Ohio, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
reinforce General Grant. Part of the Ohio National Guard, also, went to the front, and one entire division of the Tenth Corps--General Orris S. Ferry's — was composed of these regiments. On entering the United States service the National Guard regiments dropped their former numerical designations, and were numbered to conform to their place in the list of Ohio Volunteers. In addition to the National Guard, the State organized and enrolled an efficient force of militia. In 1862, when Cincinnati was threatened by an invading army, 16,000 Squirrel Hunters marched to its defense. The veterans of the Ohio volunteers reenlisted in large numbers; 20,708 of them remained in the field after their three years enlistment had expired, and served through the rest of the war. It should be remembered that the volunteers who enlisted in 1862 were not eligible for the reenlistments just referred to; that only those who enlisted in 1861 could reenlist, and that, owing to the depletion of the r
New Jersey (New Jersey, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
d on January 20, 1863. The 190th and 191st were sm ill battalions which did not leave the State, the war ending soon after their organization was commenced. New Jersey.--The record of the Jerseymen in the war shows that they were true to the patriotic memories of Princeton and Monmouth. The Jersey troops became conspicuous eaervice. At Fredericksburg the 24th New Jersey lost 136 in killed and wounded; aud the 28th New Jersey lost 193 on that bloody field. The vacant numbers in the New Jersey line occurred through the following reasons: the 16th regiment became the 1st Cavalry; the 32d the 2d Cavalry; and the 36th the 3d Cvalry; the 17th, 18th, 19th,anassas, by the 14th; and at Spotsylvania, by the 11th. The 9th Infantry was stationed on the Pacific Coast during the entire war. The 5th Infantry served in New Mexico. A part of the 8th Infantry was present at Cedar Mountain, where it fought in Augur's Division, Banks's Corps; and some of the companies served as a provost-gu
Key West (Florida, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
s in Paine's (formerly Hinks's) Division occurred in the first assault on Petersburg, June 15, 1864, at Chaffin's Farm, and at the Darbytown Road (Fair Oaks, 1864). The principal loss in Hawley's Division occurred at Deep Bottom, and Chaffin's Farm (Fort Gilmer). The most of those killed in the 73d fell in the assault on Port Hudson; and the killed in the 2d Infantry, at Natural Bridge, Va. Eleven officers of the latter regiment, including the Colonel and Chaplain, died of disease at Key West, Fla., in the summer of 1864. There is no satisfactory explanation for the surprising mortality in the 5th Colored Heavy Artillery, and 65th Colored Infantry. The former regiment was recruited in Louisiana and Mississippi, and was stationed along the Mississippi river at various points between Memphis and Port Hudson. The most of the deaths were caused by fevers; and at one time the regiment suffered from small pox. It was organized at Vicksburg in August, 1863, and was mustered out May 2
Murfreesboro (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
e mortally wounded. and 1 missing; total, 107. The 6th, 7th, 9th, and 10th Regiments served on the frontier in the Indian war, and afterwards fought under General A. J. Smith--Sixteenth Corps--at Tupelo, Nashville, and Mobile. The 10th Minnesota lost at Nashville 17 killed and 60 wounded. Including the mortally wounded. The 8th Minnesota served in the Indian Territory, after which it was stationed, in 1864, on the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad, where it had a sharp fight at Murfreesboro, December 7, 1864, in which it lost 14 killed and 75 wounded. Including the mortally wounded. Iowa.--The 3d Iowa Cavalry met its severest loss at Pea Ridge, the casualties in the five companies engaged there amounting to 24 killed, 17 wounded, and 9 missing. After the battle it was found that some of the bodies had been scalped, supposed to have been done by Indians who had joined the Confederate ranks. The 6th and 7th Cavalry served most of their time in the Indian Territory, e
Fort Fisher (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
hed some noteworthy items to the casualty lists of the war. For instance: regiment. battle. Killed and Wounded. regiment. battle. Killed and Wounded. 125th Pennsylvania Antietam 145 133d Pennsylvania Fredericksburg 184 130th Pennsylvania Antietam 178 134th Pennsylvania Fredericksburg 148 131st Pennsylvania Fredericksburg 175 151st Pennsylvania Gettysburg 233 Not mcluding 102, missing or captured. 132d Pennsylvania Antietam 152 203d Pennsylvania Enlisted for one year. Fort Fisher 191 The greatest battle of the war was fought on the soil of Pennsylvania, and by a well-ordered fortune the first volley to greet the invading foe flashed from the rifles of a Pennsylvania regiment. To the 56th Pennsylvania Infantry, Colonel J. W. Hofman commanding, belongs the historic honor of firing the first volley on that field. The skirmishers of Buford's Cavalry were earlier on the field, but were only holding the ground until the infantry columns could arrive and open the
Rutland (Vermont, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
de, composed of the 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, and 6th Infantry, and the 1st Heavy Artillery, lost more men killed in action than any other brigade in the army. The Second Vermont Brigade, composed of the 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, and 16th Infantry, was enlisted for nine months, and was present at Gettysburg, where three of the regiments, under command of General Stannard, took a conspicuous part in the repulse of Pickett's charge. The 1st Infantry was a three-months regiment. It was organized at Rutland, May 9, 1861, and fought at Big Bethel. The other regiments enlisted for three years, and the 1st Cavalry, the 2d Battery, and the 2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th Infantry reenlisted, and served through rhe war. The 11th Infantry was changed to the 1st Heavy Artillery, leaving that number in the line vacant. Massachusetts.--The 14th Infantry was changed to the 1st Heavy Artillery; and the 41st Infantry to the 3d Cavalry--leaving their original numbers vacant. The 3d, 4th, 5th,
Stone County (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
. Blair's — which enlisted for three months and fought at Camp Jackson, Boonville, and Wilson's Creek. In the latter engagement it lost 76 killed, 208 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 11 missing; total, 295. But few regiments in the war sustained a heavier loss in any one battle. After its three months enlistment had expired it returned to St. Louis, where it reorganized as a light artillery regiment, and enlisted for three years. The County Regiments — Benton, Lawrence, Stone, Greene, Cole, and Ozark Counties — enlisted for three months only; but it was three months of active service. and included some hard fighting. The 7th Missouri Infantry won special distinction in the siege of Vicksburg by its gallantry in the desperate assault of May 22d, planting its colors on the enemy's works and losing six color-bearers killed in quick succession. The 39th Missouri lost 2 officers and 120 men killed in a massacre at Centralia, Mo., September 27, 1864. Major Johns<
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