hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Gettysburg (Pennsylvania, United States) 942 140 Browse Search
Spottsylvania (Virginia, United States) 529 203 Browse Search
Virginia (Virginia, United States) 512 0 Browse Search
Fredericksburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) 457 125 Browse Search
Petersburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) 436 332 Browse Search
September 422 422 Browse Search
August 395 395 Browse Search
Washington (United States) 368 12 Browse Search
Chancellorsville (Virginia, United States) 335 89 Browse Search
John Gibbon 328 2 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

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 4,500 total hits in 695 results.

... 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ...
Mobile, Ala. (Alabama, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
ly wounded. It served, also, at Vicksburg (then in the 3d Div., 15th A. C.), in the Red River campaign, and in the final operations of the war at Fort Blakely and Mobile. During the latter campaign it was in McArthur's Division, Sixteenth Corps. The 14th Infantry was also one of Wisconsin's fighting regiments. Among its casuad. and 4 missing. It fought under General A. J. Smith (16th A. C.) in the Red River campaign, the Tupelo Expedition, land in the closing battles of the war around Mobile. The 24th Infantry, or Milwaukee regiment, was engaged in considerable hot work. losing during its term of service 111 killed and mortally wounded out of a to7th, 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 wh
Wisconsin (Wisconsin, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
o f Colonel Gordon Granger, and Colonel Philip H. Sheridan. Generals Russell A. Alger and Robert H. Minty served at one time as Majors in this same regiment. Wisconsin.--The 4th Wisconsin Cavalry will be found in the list of infantry regiments, it having been organized as the 4th Infantry, and nearly all its losses in action haunded. The quartermaster was killed, and, of a regimental band which accompanied General Blunt, not a man escaped, the enemy giving no quarter. Report Adj.-Gen. Wis., 1865, p. 621. The 1st Cavalry, also, lost 17 killed, 38 wounded, and 8 missing, in an affair at L'Anguille Ferry, Ark., August 3, 1862, the Chaplain of the Fiperations of the war at Fort Blakely and Mobile. During the latter campaign it was in McArthur's Division, Sixteenth Corps. The 14th Infantry was also one of Wisconsin's fighting regiments. Among its casualties were: At Shiloh, 16 killed, 74 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 3 missing; at Corinth (McKean's Divisi
Fredericksburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
nd 34th Infantry during their last year of service. The 7th lost 243 killed and wounded, at Fredericksburg, out of 488 engaged; the 16th lost 201 at Gaines's Mill; the 26th lost 339 in the two actions of Manassas and Fredericksburg, and the 34th lost 251 at Fair Oaks and Antietam. The 24th Cavalry an 2d Mounted Rifles served dismounted — in the Ninth Corps--until November, 1864, most of their . regiment. battle. Killed and Wounded. 125th Pennsylvania Antietam 145 133d Pennsylvania Fredericksburg 184 130th Pennsylvania Antietam 178 134th Pennsylvania Fredericksburg 148 131st PennsyFredericksburg 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 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. T
Missouri (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
souri S. M.   4 4 1 6 7 11     Aug., ‘61 --Missouri Kowalds   1 1   2 2 3     Sept., ‘62 Mari for six months. 2 23 25 3 91 94 119       Missouri Home Guards 3 68 71 5 106 111 182       Ca, fighting in the Indian Territory, Arkansas, Missouri, and East Tennessee until April, 1864, when iy of the Western cavalry regiments, served in Missouri, Arkansas, and in the Indian Territory, fight The 3d Minnesota served mostly in Minnesota. Missouri, and on the frontier. The 4th sustained its ts failed to complete their organizations. Missouri.--The losses of the Missouri regiments were sy were reenlisted to serve during the war, in Missouri. The State furnished 109,111 men, exclusivntages under which it was compelled to labor, Missouri made a loyal and gallant record,--one which wngaged in some of the battles in Arkansas and Missouri,--at Prairie Grove, and at Newtonia. These rd along the Mississippi. It was recruited in Missouri, and organized at Benton Barracks, Mo., in De
Fortress Monroe (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
              June, ‘61 A--Tompkins's Reenlisted. 1 12 13   5 5 18 Sedgwick's Second. Aug., ‘61 B--Hazard's Reenlisted. 1 13 14   15 15 29 Howard's Second. Aug., ‘61 C--Weeden's   19 19   8 8 27 Morell's Fifth. Sept., ‘61 D--Monroe's Reenlisted.   10 10   12 12 22 Doubleday's First. Sept., ‘61 E--Randolph's Reenlisted.   17 17   12 12 29 Birney's Third. Oct., ‘61 F--Belger's Reenlisted.   10 10   17 17 27   Eighteenth. Dec., ‘61 G--Owen's Reenlistedld until the last shot had been fired. An interesting episode in the history of the Tenth was the organization of a working lodge of Master Masons in the regiment — the National Zouave Lodge (U. D.)--which found lodge-room in a casermate at Fort Monroe. These communications were attended, also, by brethren from neighboring camps; thirty-four members were entered, passed, and raised; and, frequently, gray-clad soldiers of the Southern Army — prisoners within the
Milliken's Bend (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
nth. Dec., ‘63 3d U. S. Colored 4 33 37 1 366 367 404     Oct., ‘64 5th U. S. Colored   35 35 1 151 152 187 Burbridge's Cavalry, A. O.   Heavy Artillery.                   Aug., ‘63 5th U. S. Colored 4 124 128 Loss occurred at Milliken's Bend. 4 697 701 829       Infantry.                   May, ‘63 1st U. S. Colored 4 67 71 1 113 114 185 Paine's Eighteenth. June, ‘63 2d U. S. Colored 3 24 27 11 135 146 173     July, ‘63 4th U. S. Colored 3 102 105 1 186 187 292 Paine Colored   38 38 3 239 242 280 Ferrero's Ninth. Mar., ‘64 43d U. S. Colored 3 48 51   188 188 239 Ferrero's Ninth. May, ‘63 47th U. S. Colored 1 30 31 3 398 401 432 Hawkins's   May, ‘63 49th U. S. Colored 3 59 62 Loss occurred at Milliken's Bend. 1 464 465 527     Aug., ‘63 56th U. S. Colored 4 21 25 2 647 649 674   Seventh. June, ‘63 61st U. S. Colored 1 37 38 2 316 318 356   Sixteenth. Jan., ‘64 65th U. S. Colored    
Charleston (South Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
disease in any regiment from the State occurred in the 15th regiment, and was undoubtedly due to the climate of the Gulf and Lower Mississippi, in which locality the regiment was stationed during much of its service. It was mustered out at Charleston, S. C., July, 5, 1866, having serve the longest of any regiment from the State. New Hampshire--The 5th sustained the greatest loss in battle of any infantry regiment in the war. The 1st Infantry was a three-months' regiment, which was organizede to the General Government in protecting the lines of communications, and in suppressing the guerrilla bands which terrorized the exposed portions of the State. Among the general officers appointed from Kentucky were: Generals Anderson (of Fort Sumter fame), Rousseau, Thos. J. Wood, Crittenden, Johnson, Ward, Whitaker, Jackson (killed at Chaplin Hills), Fry, Burbridge, T. T. Garrard, Croxton, Long, Sanders (killed at Knoxville), Watkins, Shackleford, Nelson, Green Clay Smith, Hobson and oth
Madison (Wisconsin, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
Smith's Fifteenth. Jan., ‘62 K--Smith's       1 11 12 12 First Cavalry, A. O. Feb., ‘62 L-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Rourke's       1 10 11 11     Aug., ‘62 M-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Spencer's   4 4   10 10 14 Sheridan's Fourth.   2d Illinois Light Artillery                   May, ‘61 A-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Davidson's   5 5 1 16 17 22 Hovey's Thirteenth. Aug., ‘61 B-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Madison's   3 3   27 27 30   Sixteenth. Aug., ‘61 C-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Flood's 1 3 4   18 18 22     Dec., ‘61 D--Dresser's   6 6   13 13 19 W. S. Smith's Sixteenth. Aug., ‘61 E--Schwartz's 1 6 7   10 10 17 Lauman's Sixteenth. Dec., ‘61 F-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Powell's   5 5   24 24 29 Gresham's Seventeenth. Oct., ‘61 G-- Reenlisted and served through the war. Sparrestrom's   2 2   2
Cherokee Station (Washington, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
Mill by the 2d, 12th, and 14th Infantry; at Manassas, 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-guard at General McClellan's Headquarters. The principal loss of the 3d Cavalry occurred at Valverde, N. M., and at Cherokee Station, Ala. Colored Troops.--There were 166 regiments of colored troops organized during the war. Their total losses in battle amounted to 2,751 men killed or mortally wounded, not including the deaths among the officers, who were whites. The colored regiments in the above list were the ones which sustained the heaviest losses in battle, and together with the 54th Massachusetts, 55th Massachusetts, and 29th Connecticut, represent over three-fourths of the entire loss in action of this c
Newtonia (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 13
reason, the 13th Missouri became the 22d Ohio. Kansas.--In addition to the regiments mentioned in the above list, Kansas organized three others, which were composed of Indians, and were designated the Kansas Indian Home-Guard. These regiments were organized during the spring and summer of 1862, and served until the war had ended. They fought in the numerous battles in the Indian Territory, and were also engaged in some of the battles in Arkansas and Missouri,--at Prairie Grove, and at Newtonia. These regiments were recruited mostly from the Creeks and Cherokees. The 1st Kansas lost at Wilson's Creek 77 killed, 187 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 20 missing; total, 284. The principal losses of the 8th Kansas were: At Chickamauga, 30 killed, 165 wounded, Including the mortally wounded. and 25 missing; at Missionary Ridge, 3 killed and 24 wounded; Including the mortally wounded. and at Nashville, 8 killed and 32 wounded. Including the mortally wounded
... 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ...