Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 10. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for December 12th or search for December 12th in all documents.

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Summary of Casualties in the First Army Corps during the Recent Actions before Fredericksburg. command.December 11.December 12.December 13.December 14.total.Grand aggregate. killed.woundedmissing.Aggregate.killed.woundedmissing.Aggregate.killed48512171161229 1 5  625115161271894 recapitulation.  killed.wounded.missing.aggregate. December 1138191110339 December 12218 20 December 132101,302171,529 December 14 5 5 December 151  1  2511,5161271,894 G. M. Sorrell, Assistant Adjucember I received an order to move towards Fredericksburg, with two days rations cooked and placed in haversacks. December twelfth, I moved at dawn on the Fredericksburg road to Hamilton's Crossing, where I placed a guard for the purpose of arrestmit report of this regiment during the engagement near Fredericksburg, December thirteen, 1862. On the morning of twelfth December, the regiment with the brigade left camp with two hundred and forty-six men, non-commissioned, &c., with sevente
Of my own testimony given before the committee, but a small part is printed. I shall therefore submit to the public some facts, stated by me to the committee, which they have not published, and some of the proofs which I requested the committee to take, but which they declined, upon the ground that they had not the time to take the testimony. Among the facts submitted by me to the committee, which they have not noticed, are some which I must repeat in substance here. On the twelfth day of December last, when I crossed the Rappahannock, I was in command of the Left Grand Division of the Army of the Potomac, which numbered about forty thousand men. It was entirely crossed and posted in line of battle by three o'clock of that day. My command consisted of two corps of three divisions each. At five o'clock General Burnside came to my headquarters, where he met — with me-Generals William F. Smith and John F. Reynolds, corps commanders. The subject of conversation was a proposed a