hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 39 results in 20 document sections:

1 2
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: Volume 2., The invasion of Maryland. (search)
gning position to the several commands in the Harper's Ferry move. This lost order has been the subject of much severe comment by Virginians who have written of the war. It was addressed to D. H. Hill, and they charged that its loss was due to him, and that the failure of the campaign was the result of the lost order. As General Hill has proved that he never received the order at his headquarters it must have been lost by some one else. See General Hill's statement on p. 570, and General Colgrove's on p. 603. The following is the text of the lost order as quoted by General McClellan in his official report: Special orders, no. 191. headquarters, Army of Northern Virginia, September 9th, 1862. The army will resume its march to-morrow, taking the Hagerstown road. General Jackson's command will form the advance, and after passing Middletown, with such portions as he may select, take the route toward Sharpsburg, cross the Potomac at the most convenient point, and by Frida
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces in the Chancellorsville campaign. (search)
Strous (k), Capt. Ed. L. Witman; 128th Pa., Col. Joseph A. Matthews (c), Maj. Cephas W. Dyer. Brigade loss: k, 5; w, 53; m, 394 = 452. Second Brigade, Col. Samuel Ross: 20th Conn., Lieut.-Col. William B. Wooster (c), Maj. Philo B. Buckingham; 3d Md., Lieut.-Col. Gilbert P. Robinson; 123d N. Y., Col. Archibald L. McDougall; 145th N. Y., Col. E. Livingston Price (w), Capt. George W. Reid. Brigade loss: k, 42; w, 253; m, 204 = 499. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Thomas H. Ruger: 27th Ind., Col. Silas Colgrove (w); 2d Mass., Col. Samuel M. Quincy; 13th, N. J., Col. Ezra A. Carman, Maj. John Grimes (w), Capt. George A. Beardsley; 107th N. Y., Col. Alexander S. Diven; 3d Wis., Col. William Hawley. Brigade loss: k, 81; w, 465; m, 68 = 614. Artillery, Capt. Robert H. Fitzhugh: K, 1st N. Y., Lieut. Edward L. Bailey; M, 1st N. Y., Lieut. Charles E. Winegar (c), Lieut. John D. Woodbury; F, 4th U. S., Lieut. Franklin B. Crosby (k), Lieut. Edward D. Muhlenberg. Artillery loss: k,7; w, 30; m, 9 = 4
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces at Gettysburg, Pa., July 1st-3d, 1863. (search)
Henry H. Lockwood: 1st Md. Potomac Home Brigade, Col. William P. Maulsby; 1st Md. Eastern Shore, Col. James Wallace; 150th N. Y., Col. John H. Ketcham. Brigade loss: k, 35; w, 121; mn, 18 = 174. Third Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Thomas H. Ruger, Col. Silas Colgrove: 27th Ind., Col. Silas Colgrove, Lieut.-Col. John R. Fesler; 2d Mass., Lieut.-Col. Charles R. Mudge (k), Maj. Charles F. Morse; 13th N. J., Col. Ezra A. Carman; 107th N. Y., Col. Nirom M. Crane; 3d Wis., Col. William Hawley. Brigade loss:Col. Silas Colgrove, Lieut.-Col. John R. Fesler; 2d Mass., Lieut.-Col. Charles R. Mudge (k), Maj. Charles F. Morse; 13th N. J., Col. Ezra A. Carman; 107th N. Y., Col. Nirom M. Crane; 3d Wis., Col. William Hawley. Brigade loss: k, 49; w, 225; m, 5=279. Second division, Brig.-Gen. John W. Geary. First Brigade, Col. Charles Candy: 5th Ohio, Col. John H. Patrick; 7th Ohio, Col. William R. Creighton; 29th Ohio, Capt. Wilbur F. Stevens (w), Capt. Edward Hayes; 66th Ohio, Lieut.-Col. Eugene Powell; 28th Pa., Capt. John Flynn; 147th Pa. (8 co's), Lieut.-Col. Ario Pardee, Jr. Brigade loss: k, 18; w, 117; mn, 3 = 138. Second Brigade, Col. George A. Cobham, Jr., Brig.-Gen. Thomas L. Kane, Col. George A. Cobham, Jr.: 29th P
rs there were 3,613 who were over 6 feet 3 inches, and among them were some who were over 7 feet. The tallest man for whose stature the testimony is complete and unimpeachable, is Captain Van Buskirk, of the Twenty-seventh Indiana. General Silas Colgrove, formerly colonel of that regiment writes that he has frequently seen him measured and that his stature was full 82 1/2 inches, without his shoes, or 209.5 centimeters. General Colgrove adds that he was a brave man, and bore the fatiguesGeneral Colgrove adds that he was a brave man, and bore the fatigues of marching as well as most men of ordinary stature. The shortest man for whom the record is satisfactorily verified was a member of the One Hundred and Ninety-second Ohio. At the time of enlistment he was 24 years old, and 40 inches in height. Colonel F. W. Butterfield, his commanding officer, vouches for the correctness of this record. He also assures us that he knew the man well; and, that there was no soldier in his command who could endure a greater amount of fatigue and exposure.--D
served next in Davis's (2d) Division, Fourteenth Corps. Twenty-Seventh Indiana Infantry. Ruger's Brigade — Williams's Division--Twelfth Corps. Colonel Silas Colgrove; Bvt. Brig.-Gen. companies. killed and died of wounds. died of disease, accidents, in Prison, &c. Total Enrollment. Officers. Men. Total. Officers.Pa. 40 On Picket 1 Gunboat service 1     Present, also, at Front Royal, Va.; Cassville, Ga., Dallas, Ga.; Lost Mountain, Ga.; Kenesaw, Ga. notes.--Silas Colgrove was the typical old-fashioned Colonel of the American Army. At times, brave and courageous to a fault; at others, careful and judicious to an admirable degre wounded, and 1 missing At Resaca, Ga., the regiment captured the colors and the Colonel of the Thirty-eighth Alabama, together with a large number of prisoners, Colgrove handling his men well in this fight, the loss not exceeding 68 killed and wounded, while it inflicted five times that on the enemy. In 1864 the designation of t
as a well-known and efficient command. The 9th Indiana Battery lost 29 men killed in a boiler explosion on the Steamer Eclipse, January 27, 1865, at Paducah, Ky.; the 9th Cavalry lost 78 men on the Steamer Sultana; and the 69th Infantry lost 2 officers and 20 men drowned by the swamping of a boat in Matagorda Bay. Many of the noted generals of the war were Indianians: Generals Lew. Wallace, Hovey, Jefferson C. Davis, Meredith, Wagner, Jos. J. Reynolds, Kimball, Foster, Cruft, Harrow, Colgrove, Miller, Cameron, Gresham, Coburn, Hascall, Harrison, Veatch, Manson, Benton, Scribner, Wilder, Grose, and others. The age and height of 118,254 Indiana soldiers (out of about 200,000 enlistments) was recorded, with the following interesting result: Height. No. of men. Height. No. of men. Age. No. of men. Age. No. of men. Under 5 ft. 1 in. 501 At 5 ft. 10 in. 15,047 Under 17 years 270 At 26 years 4,283 At 5 ft. 1 in. 263 At 5 ft. 11 in. 8,706 At 17 years 634 At 27 years 3,7
John Adams Dix was born in Boscawen, New Hampshire, July 24, 1798. In 1812, he entered the United States army as a cadet, and continued in military service until 1828, when he settled in Cooperstown, New York, to practise law. He served one term in the United States Senate, and became Secretary of the Treasury under President Buchanan. On the outbreak of the Civil Federal generals—No. 5 Indiana Robert Francis Catterson, originally Colonel of the 97th regiment. Silas Colgrove forwarded Lee's lost order before Antietam to McClellan. Thomas T. Crittenden, originally Colonel of the 6th Infantry. Robert Sanford Foster, brevetted for gallantry. Alvin P. Hovey, gallant division commander. Thomas John Lucas, originally Colonel of the 16th Infantry. George F. McGinnis, originally Colonel of the 11th Infantry. James W. McMillan, originally Colonel 1st artillery. John F. Miller, Colonel of the 29th regiment; wounded at Stone's River. Charles Cruft, c
Lieut.-Colonel of the 25th regiment. Charles S. Hamilton commanded a division at Corinth. John C. Starkweather commanded a brigade at Perryville. Halbert E. Paine commanded a division at Port Hudson. Rufus King commanded a division in the Army of the Potomac. Coates, J. H., Mar. 13, 1865. Cobb, Amasa, Mar. 13, 1865. Cobham, G. A., Jr. , July 19, 1864. Coburn, J., Mar. 13, 1865. Cockerill, J. R., Mar. 13, 1865. Coggswell, W., Dec. 15, 1864. Coit, J. B., Mar. 13, 1865. Colgrove, Silas, Aug. 4, 1864. Collier, F. H., Mar. 13, 1865. Colville, W., Jr. , Mar. 3, 1865. Comly, J. M., Mar. 13, 1865. Commager, H. S., Mar. 13, 1865. Congdon, J. A., Mar. 13, 1865. Conklin, J. T., Mar. 13, 1865. Conrad, J., Mar. 13, 1865. Cook, Edw. F.. Mar. 13, 1865. Coon, D. E., Mar. 8, 1865. Corbin, H. C., Mar. 13, 1865. Coughlin, John, April 9, 1865. Cowan, B. R., Mar. 13, 1865. Cox, John C., July 4, 1863. Cox, Robert C., April 2, 1865. Cram, Geo. H., Mar. 13, 1862. Cramer, F
George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army (ed. George Gordon Meade), chapter 5 (search)
. The enemy having, upon the withdrawal of Ruger's troops for reinforcement of the left wing, occupied the position on the spur, the morning of the 3d of July dawned upon an entirely different disposition of the troops on this part of the field. Geary's line, which had been along the main hill in the direction of the prolongation of the spur, was now extended and sharply refused on the ridge west of the indentation on the hill, while Ruger's troops, consisting as before of McDougall's and Colgrove's brigades, had formed in the order named, from left to right, a line slightly concave to the enemy's position, entirely south of the swale, with their left resting almost on the Baltimore Pike and their right on Rock Creek. See Map No. 19, July 3, 4.30 A. M. Lieutenant Muhlenberg, chief of artillery of the Twelfth Corps, stationed his own and Lieutenant Kinzie's batteries, supported by Lockwood's brigade, southwest of the Baltimore Pike, commanding the enemy's position, the low ground i
, Dr., I, 8. Chapman, Gen., I, 289. Chase, Salmon P., I, 9, 160, 235, 264, 380, 381, 388. Chase, W. H., I, 14. Chauncey, Capt., II, 162. Chesney, Capt., II, 248, 249, 252. Churubusco, battle of, 1847, I, 196. Clarke, A. J., II, 79. Clay, Henry, I, 16. Clymer, Dr., Meredith, I, 263. Coats, Col., William, I, 4. Cobb, Mr., I, 249. Cold Harbor, battle of, June 3, 1864, II, 200. Coles, Col., II, 241. Coles, Rev., II, 151. Colfax, Col., II, 167. Colgrove, Silas, II, 98. Colladay, Samuel R., I, 384. Collamore, Senator, II, 165. Collins, Lieut., I, 266. Collis, C. H. T., II, 164. Committee on the Conduct of the War, II, 169-176, 179, 186, 188. Comstock, Cyrus B., I, 209, 210. Connor, David, I, 36, 85, 131, 187, 192. Constant, M., I, 8. Contreras, battle of, 1847, I, 196. Cooper, James H., I, 286, 289, 290, 291, 294, 295; II, 47. Coppee, II, 197, 202. Cortez, Gen., II, 152. Cos, Gen., I, 179, 180. Coster,
1 2