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Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The opposing forces at Chickamauga, Ga. September 19th-20th; 1863. (search)
Ky., Col. Henry C. Dunlap; 64th Ohio, Col. Alexander Mcllvain; 65th Ohio, Lieut.-Col. Horatio N. Whitbeck (w), Maj. Samuel C. Brown (m w), Capt. Thomas Powell; 125th Ohio, Col. Emerson Opdycke. Brigade loss: k, 51; w, 283; n, 58 == 392. Artillery: 8th Ind. (First Brigade), Capt. George Estep (w); 6th Ohio (Third Brigade), Capt. Cullen Bradley. Artillery loss: k, 2; w, 17; m, 7 == 26. Second division, Maj.-Gen. John M. Palmer. Staff loss: k, 1; w, 2; m, 3 == 6. First Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Charles Cruft: 31st Ind., Col. John T. Smith; 1st Ky. (5 co's), Lieut.-Col. Alva R. Hadlock; 2d Ky., Col. Thomas D. Sedgewick; 90th Ohio, Col. Charles H. Rippey. Brigade loss: k, 24; w, 213; m, 53 == 290. Second Brigade, Brig.-Gen. William B. Hazen: 9th Ind., Col. Isaac C. B. Suman; 6th Ky., Col. George T. Shackelford (w), Lieut.-Col. Richard Rockingham (k), Maj. Richard T. Whitaker; 41st Ohio, Col. Aquila Wiley; 124th Ohio, Col. Oliver H. Payne (w), Maj. James B. Hampson. Brigade loss: k, 46;
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., chapter 9.97 (search)
Corps, Army of the Tennessee; Geary's, Twelfth Corps, Army of the Potomac; and Cruft's, Fourteenth Corps, Army of the Cumberland. Geary was on the right at Wauhatchie, Cruft at the center, and Osterhaus near Brown's Ferry. These troops were all west of Lookout Creek. The enemy had the east bank of the creek strongly picketedhe morning of the 24th Hooker moved Geary's division, supported by a brigade of Cruft's, up Lookout Creek, to effect a crossing. The remainder of Cruft's division wCruft's division was to seize the bridge over the creek, near the crossing of the railroad. Osterhaus was to move up to the bridge and cross it. The bridge was seized by Grose's brig enemy, seeing their left flank and rear menaced, gave way and were followed by Cruft and Osterhaus. Soon these were up abreast of Geary, and the whole command pushotomac; Osterhaus's division of the Fifteenth Corps, Army of the Tennessee; and Cruft's division of the Army of the Cumberland. Sherman had three divisions of his o
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., The army of the Cumberland at Chattanooga. (search)
till held to the chief feature, which was to turn Bragg's right. The morning of November 24th opened with a cold, drizzling rain. Thick clouds of mist were settling on Lookout Mountain. At daybreak Geary's division, and Whitaker's brigade of Cruft's division, marched up to Wauhatchie, the nearest point at which Lookout Creek, swelled by recent rains, could be forded, and at 8 o'clock they crossed. The heavy clouds of mist reaching down the mountain-side hid the movement from the enemy, whd of Missionary Ridge. The ridge was quickly carried, and, sweeping north-ward, Hooker soon came upon Stewart's division, posted on the summit, and behind the earth-works which the Army of the Cumberland had thrown up the day after Chickamauga. Cruft's division assaulted and carried the works, thus having the good fortune of retaking the works they themselves had constructed. It was by this time nearly sundown. Hooker reached the south end of the ridge too late in the day to relieve the pre
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3., Opposing forces in the Chattanooga campaign. November 23d-27th, 1863. (search)
the publication of the Official Records ) to Brigadier-General Richard C. Drum, Adjutant-General of the Army. K stands for killed; w for wounded; m w for mortally wounded; m for captured or missing; c for captured. The Union army: Maj.-Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. army of the Cumberland.--Maj.-Gen. George H. Thomas. General Headquarters: 1st Ohio Sharp-shooters, Capt. G. M. Barber; 10th Ohio, Lieut.-Col. W. M. Ward. Fourth Army Corps, Maj.-Gen. Gordon Granger. First division, Brig.-Gen. Charles Cruft. Escort: E, 92d Ill., Capt. Matthew Van Buskirk. Second Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Walter C. Whitaker: 96th Ill., Col. Thomas E. Champion, Maj. George Hicks; 35th Ind., Col. Bernard F. Mullen; 8th Ky., Col. Sidney M. Barnes; 40th Ohio, Col. Jacob E. Taylor; 51st Ohio, Lieut.-Col. Charles H. Wood; 99th Ohio, Lieut.-Col. John E. Cummins. Brigade loss: k, 17; w, 63; m, 2==82. Third Brigade, Col. William Grose: 59th Ill., Maj. Clayton Hale; 75th Ill., Col. John E. Bennett; 84th Ill., Col.
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces in the Atlanta campaign. May 3d-September 8th, 1864. (search)
o divisions and corps. Brig.-Gen. William F. Barry (chief-of-artillery). Army of the Cumberland, Maj.-Gen. George H. Thomas. Escort, I, 1st Ohio Cav., Lieut. Henry C. Reppert. Artillery: See batteries attached to divisions and corps. Brig.-Gen. John M. Brannan (chief-of-artillery). Fourth Army Corps, Maj.-Gen. Oliver O. Howard, Maj.-Gen. David S. Stanley. first division, Maj.-Gen. David S. Stanley, Brig.-Gen. William Grose, Brig.-Gen. Nathan Kimball. First Brigade, Brig.-Gen. Charles Cruft, Col. Isaac M. Kirby: 21st Ill., Non-veterans attached to 101st Ohio till June 4th and 9th, respectively. when regiments rejoined from veteran furlough. Maj. James E. Calloway, Capt. William H. Jamison; 38th Ill., Non-veterans attached to 101st Ohio till June 4th and 9th, respectively. when regiments rejoined from veteran furlough. Lieut.-Col. William T. Chapman; 31st Ind., Col. John T. Smith; 81st Ind., Lieut.-Col. William C. Wheeler; 1st Ky., Ordered home for muster-out M
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4., The opposing forces at Nashville, Dec. 15-16, 1864. (search)
ew W. Rogers; 95th Ill., Lieut.-Col. William Avery; 44th Mo., Lieut.-Col. Andrew J. Barr. Brigade loss: w, 1. Artillery: 14th Ind., Capt. Francis W. Morse; A, 2d Mo., Lieut. John Zepp. Artillery loss: k, 1. Provisional detachment, Maj.-Gen. James B. Steedman. Provisional division, Composed mainly of detachments belonging to the 14th, 15th, 17th, and 20th corps, which had been unable to rejoin their proper commands, serving with Sherman's army on the march through Georgia. Brig.-Gen. Charles Cruft. First Brigade, Col. Benjamin Harrison. Second Brigade, Col. John G. Mitchell. Third Brigade, Lieut.-Col. Charles H. Grosvenor. Loss in these three brigades: k, 19; w, 68; mi, 32 == 119. Second Brigade (Army Tenn.), Col. A. G. Malloy. Miscellaneous: 68th Ind. (attached to Third Brigade), Lieut.-Col. H. J. Espy; 18th Ohio, Capt. Ebenezer Grosvenor, Capt. J. M. Benedict, Lieut. Chas. Grant. Loss: k, 12; w, 47; m, 9 == 68. Artillery: 20th Ind., Capt. M. A. Osborne; 18th Ohio, Capt.
Twenty-fifth Indiana Infantry, commanding Second Brigade. No. 51.-Col. Cyrus Hall, Fourteenth Illinois Infantry. No. 52.-Lieut. Col. William Cam, Fourteenth Illinois, commanding Fifteenth Ili. nois Infantry. No. 53.-Capt. Louis D. Kelley, Fifteenth Illinois Infantry. No. 54.-Col. John A. Davis, Forty-sixth Illinois Infantry. No. 55.-Maj. John W. Foster, Twenty-fifth Indiana Infantry. No. 56.-Brig. Gen. Jacob G. Lauman, U. S. Army, commanding Third Brigade. No. 57.-Col. Charles Cruft, Thirty-first Indiana Infantry. No. 58.-Lieut. Col. John Osborn, Thirty-first Indiana Infantry. No. 59.-Col. Hugh B. Reed, Forty-fourth Indiana Infantry. No. 60.-Col. John H. McHenry, jr., Seventeenth Kentucky Infantry. No. 61.--Col. Benjamin H. Bristow, Twenty-fifth Kentucky Infantry. No. 62.-Maj. William B. Wall, Twenty-fifth Kentucky Infantry. No. 63.-Lieut. Cuthbert W. Laing, Second Michigan Battery. No. 64.-Lieut. Edward Brotzmann, Mann's battery Missouri Ligh
s regiment appears again in this same list. Gettysburg Alex. Hays's Second 88 22d Michigan Chickamauga Morgan's Reserve 88 20th Wisconsin Prairie Grove Herron's ------ 88 9th Massachusetts Gaines's Mill Morell's Fifth 87 8th U. S. Colored Olustee Seymour's Tenth 87 32d Iowa Pleasant Hill Mower's Sixteenth 86 55th Illinois Shiloh Sherman's ------ 86 4th Vermont Wilderness Getty's Sixth 84 22d Massachusetts Gaines's Mill Morell's Fifth 84 13th U. S. Colored Nashville Cruft's ------ 84 10th Ohio Chaplin Hills Perryville, Ky., Oct. 8, 1862. Rousseau's ------ 84 49th Ohio Pickett's Mills T. J. Wood's Fourth 83 2d Wisconsin Manassas This loss occurred at Gainesville on the 29th. Hatch's First The First Corps was designated in that campaign the Third Corps, Army of Virginia. 83 48th New York Fort Wagner Seymour's Tenth 83 15th Kentucky Chaplin Hills Rousseau's ------ 82 36th Wisconsin Cold Harbor June 1st, 49 killed; June 3d, 32 kill
my's cannon. The three divisions of this new corps were placed under the commands of Generals Palmer, Sheridan, and Wood. Soon after its organization the corps went into action at Missionary Ridge, where it distinguished itself by its brilliant and successful charge up the heights. In this battle the two divisions of Sheridan and Wood lost 280 killed, 2,078 wounded, and 12 missing; total, 2,370, or more than half the casualties at Missionary Ridge. The first division, under command of General Cruft, was also engaged. During the following winter the corps marched to the relief of Knoxville, a campaign memorable for the suffering, hunger, and hardships endured by the men. In May, 1864, it moved on the Atlanta campaign, General Howard commanding the corps, and Generals Stanley, Newton, and Wood the divisions. Its hardest fighting during that campaign occurred at Pickett's Mills, and in the unsuccessful assault on Kenesaw Mountain. After the evacuation of Atlanta, the Fourth and
2. Taking the field immediately, it was assigned to Cruft's Brigade of Lew Wallace's Division, in which commant of the war. Thirty-First Indiana Infantry. Cruft's Brigade — Stanley's Division--Fourth Corps. (1) Col. Charles Cruft; Bvt. Major-Gen. (2) Col. John Osborn. (3) Col. John T. Smith. companies. killed a commanded in this action by Major Frederick Am, Colonel Cruft being in command of the brigade, which was then o action next at Stone's River, it being then in General Cruft's (1st) Brigade, Palmer's (2d) Division, Crittenrland was reorganized, the regiment becoming part of Cruft's (1st) Brigade, Palmer's (1st) Division, Fourth Corarles Ewing. Twenty-First Illinois Infantry. Cruft's Brigade — Stanley's Division--Fourth Corps. ( After this battle the Twenty-first was assigned to Cruft's (1st) Brigade, Stanley's (1st) Division, Fourth Coto Kentucky, September 4th, where it was assigned to Cruft's Division of General Nelson's Army of Kentucky