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Oct. 27-28, 1864.-Engagement at Fair Oaks and Darbytown Road.

Engagement at Boydton Plank Road or Hatcher's Run.

29, 1864.-Skirmish at Johnson's Farm.

Nov. 1-5, 1864.-Scout from Bermuda Hundred into Charles City County. 5, 1864.-Skirmishes in front of Forts Haskell and Morton.

Dec.

7, 1864.-Reconnaissance toward Stony Creek.

16, 1864.-Skirmish near Lec's Mill.

24, 1864.-Skirmish near Prince George Court-House.

25, 1864.-Maj. Gen. Andrew A. Humphreys, U. S. Army, assigned to temporary command of the Second Army Corps.

28, 1864.-Scout toward Stony Creek Station.

Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Hancock, U. S. Army, assigned to command of a new veteran volunteer army corps (to be organized).

1, 1864.-Expedition to Stony Creek Station, and skirmish.

3, 1864. The Tenth and Eighteenth Army Corps discontinued and the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth Army Corps organized, to be commanded respectively by Maj. Gens. Edward O. C. Ord and Godfrey Weitzel, U. S. Army.

4, 1864.-Skirmish near Davenport Church.

7-12, 1864.-Expedition to Hicksford, and skirmishes.

8, 1864.-Skirmish at Hatcher's Run.

9-10, 1864.-Reconnaissance to Hatcher's Run, and skirmishes.

10, 1864.-Skirmish in front of Fort Holly.

14, 1864.-Maj. Gen. Edward O. C. Ord, U. S. Army, in temporary command of the Army of the James.

24, 1864.-Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, U. S. Army, resumes command of the Army of the James.

30, 1864.-Maj. Gen. John G. Parke, U. S. Army, in temporary command of the Army of the Potomac, and Bvt. Maj. Gen. Orlando B. Willcox, U. S. Army, of the Ninth Army Corps.

REPORTS, ETC:*

No. 1.-Lieut. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, U. S. Army, commanding Armies of the United States.

No. 2.-Lieut. Col. Michael R. Morgan, U. S. Army, Chief Commissary of Subsistence of Armies operating against Richmond, of operations September 16. No. 3.-Capt. John H. Woodward, Commissary of Subsistence, U. S. Army, of operations September 16.

No. 4.-Capt. Nathaniel A. Richardson, Commissary of Subsistence, U. S. Army, of operations September 16.

No. 5.-Maj. Gen. George G. Meade, U. S. Army, commanding Army of the Potomac,
No. 6.-Itinerary of the Army of the Potomac and Army of the James.
No. 7.-Return of Casualties in the Union Forces.

No. 8.-Maj. Nathaniel Michler, Corps of Engineers, U. S. Army, Acting Chief Engi-
ncer, Army of the Potomac, of operations September 17-November 14.
No. 9. Maj. James C. Duane, Corps of Engineers, U. S. Army, of operations Novem-
ber 13-December 31.

No. 10.-Surg. Thomas A. McParlin, U. S. Army, Medical Director, Army of the Poto

mac.

No 11.-Brig. Gen. Marsena R. Patrick, U. S. Army, Provost-Marshal-General, Army of the Potomac, of operations July 30-November 1.

*For reports of Brig. Gen. Henry J. Hunt, chief of artillery, Army of the Potomac, and Col. Henry L. Abbot, commanding Siege Train, Capt. Marcus W. Murdock, One hundred and eleventh New York Infantry, and Confederate Roll of Honor, seo Vol, XL, Part I, pp. 277, 655, 351, 810, respectively.

No. 12.-Maj. Benjamin F. Fisher, Signal Corps, U. S. Army, Chief Signal Officer, Army of the Potomac, of operations August 1-October 31.

No. 13.-Capt. Peter A. Taylor, Signal Corps, U. S. Army, Signal Officer, of operations August 12-25.

No. 14.-Brig. Gen. Henry W. Benham, U. S. Army, commanding Engineer Brigade and Defenses of City Point, of operations August 1-November 19.

No. 15.-Lieut. Col. James W. Walsh, Third Pennsylvania Cavalry, Provost Guard, of operations October 27-28.

No. 16.-Capt. Henry H. Pierce, First Connecticut Heavy Artillery, of operations October 22.

No. 17.-Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Hancock, U. S. Army, commanding. Second Army Corps, of operations August 12-October 28.

No. 18.—Brig. Gen. Francis C. Barlow, U. S. Army, commanding First Division, of operations August 13-17.

No. 19.-Brig. Gen. Nelson A. Miles, U. S. Army, commanding First Division, of

operations August 12-26, October 27-30, and December 9-10.

No. 20.-Col. James C. Lynch, One hundred and eighty-third Pennsylvania Infantry, commanding First Brigade, of operations August 22–26.

No. 21.-Bvt. Brig. Gen. George N. Macy, Twentieth Massachusetts Infantry, commanding First Brigade, of operations December 9-10.

No. 22.-Maj. James Fleming, Twenty-eighth Massachusetts Infantry, of operations August 13-20.

No. 23.-Capt. Lucius H. Ives, Twenty-sixth Michigan Infantry, of operations August 13-20.

No. 24.-Maj. James E. Larkin, Fifth New Hampshire Infantry, of operations July 26-30 and August 13-20.

No. 25.-Capt. Oscar F. Hulser, Second New York Heavy Artillery, of operations August 13-20.

No. 26. Maj. George Hogg, Second New York Heavy Artillery, of operations August 13 and December 9-10.

No. 27. Capt. William Church, Fourth New York Heavy Artillery, of operations August 13-20.

No. 28.-Capt. John B. Vande Wiele, Fourth New York Heavy Artillery, of operations August 22-26.

No. 29.-Maj. George W. Scott, Sixty-first New York Infantry, of operations August 13-20 and December 9-10.

No. 30.-Col. William Wilson, Eighty-first Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 13-20 and December 9-10.

No. 31.-Capt. William A. F. Stockton, One hundred and fortieth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations December 9.

No. 32. Col. George T. Egbert, One hundred and eighty-third Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 14-20 and December 9-10.

No. 33.-Lieut. Col. Joseph M. Murphy, Seventh New York Heavy Artillery, Fourth Brigade, of operations August 12-25.

No. 34. Capt. Horatio N. Hunt, Sixty-fourth New York Infantry, of operations August 13-20 and 22-26.

No. 35.-Capt. Albert Gosse, Sixty-sixth New York Infantry, of operations August

13-20.

No. 36.-Lieut. Simon Pincus, Sixty-sixth New York Infantry, of operations August

22-26.

Nō. 37.—Capt. Philip H. Schreyer, Fifty-third Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 13-20 and 22-26.

No. 38.-Capt. David W. Megraw, One hundred and sixteenth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 13-20.

No. 39.-Capt. John R. Weltner, One hundred and sixteenth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 22-26.

No. 40.-Capt. James H. Hamlin, One hundred and forty-fifth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 12-25.

No. 41.-Capt. Alfred A. Rhinehart, One hundred and forty-eighth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 13-20.

No. 42.-Capt. James F. Weaver, One hundred and forty-eighth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 22-27.

No. 43.-Lieut. Col. William Wilson, Eighty-first Pennsylvania Infantry, commanding Consolidated Brigade, of operations August 22-26.

No. 44.-Maj. Richard Moroney, Sixty-ninth New York Infantry, of operations August 12-October 30.

No. 45.-Maj. John W. Byron, Eighty-eighth New York Infantry, commanding Third Provisional Regiment, of operations August 14.

No. 46.—Col. Thomas A. Smyth, First Delaware Infantry, commanding Second Division, of operations August 12-20.

No. 47.-Maj. Gen. John Gibbon, U. S. Army, commanding Second Division, of operations August 25 and November 5.

No. 48.-Brig. Gen. Thomas W. Egan, U. S. Army, commanding Second Division, of operations October 26-28.

No. 49.-Lieut. Col. Horace P. Rugg, Fifty-ninth New York Infantry, commanding First Brigade, of operations August 12-26 and October 26–28.

No. 50.-Capt. Joseph W. Spaulding, Nineteenth Maine Infantry, of operations August 12-25.

No. 51.-Maj. Isaac W. Starbird, Nineteenth Maine Infantry, of operations October

26-28.

No. 52.-Lieut. Col. Edmund Rice, Nineteenth Massachusetts Infantry, of operations August 12-25.

No. 53. Capt. Isaac H. Boyd, Nineteenth Massachusetts Infantry, of operations

October 26-28.

No. 54.-Capt. Gustave Magnitzky, Twentieth Massachusetts Infantry, of oper

ations October 27-28.

No. 55.-Lieut. Col. S. Newell Smith, Seventh Michigan Infantry, of operations August 23-26.

No. 56.—Capt. George W. Ryerson, Fifty-ninth New York Infantry, of operations August 25.

No. 57.-Lieut. William Ludgate, Fifty-ninth New York Infantry, of operations

October 26-28.

No. 58.-Capt. William S. Burt, One hundred and fifty-second New York Infantry, of operations August 12–21.

No. 59.-Maj. Timothy O'Brien, One hundred and fifty-second New York Infantry, of operations August 25.

No. 60.-Lieut. Charles H. Dygert, One hundred and fifty-second New York Infantry, of operations October 26-28.

No. 61.-Lieut. Col. Charles Kleckner, One hundred and eighty-fourth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations October 26-28.

No. 62.-Capt. Austin Cannon, Thirty-sixth Wisconsin Infantry, of operations Au

gust 14-20.

No. 63.-Capt. George A. Fisk, Thirty-sixth Wisconsin Infantry, of operations Oc

tober 27.

No. 64.-Col. Mathew Murphy, One hundred and eighty-second New York Infantry (Sixty-ninth New York National Guard Artillery), commanding Second Brigade, of operations August 12-26.

No. 65.-Col. James M. Willett, Eighth New York Heavy Artillery, commanding Second Brigade, of operations October 26-28.

No. 66.-Lieut. Col. Francis E. Pierce, One hundred and eighth New York Infantry, commanding Third Brigade, of operations August 14-21.

No. 67.-Brig. Gen. Thomas A. Smyth, U. S. Army, commanding Third Brigade, of
operations August 23-25 and October 25-28.

No. 68.-Lieut. Col. Samuel A. Moore, Fourteenth Connecticut Infantry, of operations
August 15, 16, and 25, and October 27.

No. 69.-Capt. John T. Dent, First Delaware Infantry, of operations October 26-28.
No. 70.-Capt. Henry F. Chew, Twelfth New Jersey Infantry, of operations August
23-26 and October 27-28.

No. 71.-Lieut. Col. George F. Hopper, Tenth New York Infantry, of operations October 27.

No. 72.-Lieut. Andrew Boyd, One hundred and eighth New York Infantry, of
operations October 26-28.

No. 73.—Maj. Patrick S. Tinen, Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations
October 27-28.

No. 74.-Capt. Charles McAnally, Sixty-ninth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations
October 27-28.

No. 75.-Lieut. John H. Gallager, One hundred and sixth Pennsylvania Infantry,
of operations October 26-28.

No. 76.-Capt. John Fordyce, Seventh West Virginia Infantry, of operations October 27-28.

No. 77.-Bvt. Maj. Gen. Gershom Mott, U. S. Army, commanding Third Division, of operations August 12-19, September 10, October 1-5 and 24-28, and December 6-12.

No. 78.-Lieut. Charles F. Moore, Eighth New Jersey Infantry, Aide-de-Camp, of
operations December 7-12.

No. 79.-Capt. Edwin B. Houghton, Seventeenth Maine Infantry, Acting Division
Inspector, of operations December 7-12.

No. 80.-Chaplain Lorenzo Barber, Second U. S. Sharpshooters, of operations Decem-
ber 7-12.

No. 81.-Brig. Gen. P. Regis de Trobriand, U. S. Army, commanding First Brigade, of operations August 12-20, October 26-28, and December 7-12.

No. 82.-Col. John Pulford, Fifth Michigan Infantry, commanding Second Brigade, of operations August 14–17.

No. 83.-Brig. Gen. Byron R. Pierce, U. S. Army, commanding Second Brigade, of operations October 1-5 and 27, and December 7-12.

No. 84.-Maj. Nathaniel Shatswell, First Massachusetts Heavy Artillery, of oper

ations August 15-16, September 30-October 5, and October 27.

No. 85.-Maj. Daniel S. Root, Fifth Michigan Infantry, of operations August 15-16.
No. 86. Col. John Pulford, Fifth Michigan Infantry, of operations October 27.
No. 87.-Licut. Col. Benjamin C. Butler, Ninety-third New York Infantry, of oper-
ations August 15-16 and October 27.

No. 88. Capt. Alanson H. Nelson, Fifty-seventh Pennsylvania Infantry, of oper-
ations August 15-17.

No. 89.-Lieut. Col. William B. Neeper, Fifty-seventh Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations October 1-5.

No. 90.-Capt. Lorenzo D. Bumpus, Fifty-seventh Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations October 27.

No. 91.-Lieut. Col. George Zinn, Eighty-fourth Pennsylvania Infantry, of oper-
ations August 15-16.

No. 92.-Capt. John R. Ross, Eighty-fourth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations
October 27.

No. 93. Capt. Charles E. Patton, One hundred and fifth Pennsylvania Infantry,
of operations August 15-17.

No. 94.-Capt. John C. Conser, One hundred and fifth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations October 1-5.

No. 95.-Capt. James Miller, One hundred and fifth Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations October 26-28.

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No. 96.-Lieut. Col. Casper W. Tyler, One hundred and forty-first Pennsylvania Infantry, of operations August 15-16 and October 1-5 and 27.

No. 97.-Capt. John Wilson, First U. S. Sharpshooters, of operations August1 5-16. No. 98. Capt. Henry C. Garrison, First U. S. Sharpshooters, of operations October

1-5.

No. 99.-Capt. Benjamin M. Peck, One hundred and forty-first Pennsylvania Infantry, commanding First U. S. Sharpshooters, of operations October 27. No. 100.-Bvt. Brig. Gen. Robert McAllister, U. S. Army, commanding Third Bri-. gade, of operations August 13-20 and 25, September 9-10, October 1-5 and 24-28, November 5, and December 7-12.

No. 101.-Maj. Charles C. Rivers, Eleventh Massachusetts Infantry, of operations October 1-5.

No. 102.-Capt. Thomas C. Godfrey, Fifth, New Jersey Infantry, of operations August 13-21.

No. 103.-Lieut. Col. Francis Price, Seventh New Jersey Infantry, of operations

October 1-5.

No. 104.-Capt. Michael Beahen, Eighth New Jersey Infantry, of operations October

1-5.

No. 105.-Lieut. Col. John Schoonover, Eleventh New Jersey Infantry, of operations

October 1-5.

No. 106.-Lieut. Col. John R. Tappen, One hundred and twentieth New York Infantry, of operations October 1-5.

No. 107.-Capt. A. Judson Clark, Battery B, First New Jersey Light Artillery, commanding Artillery Brigade, of operations August 12-26.

No. 108.-Maj. John G. Hazard, First Rhode Island Light Artillery, commanding Artillery Brigade, of operations October 26-28.

No. 109.-Capt. Edwin B. Dow, Sixth Maine Battery, of operations August 12–27.
No. 110.-Lieut. Henry H. Granger, Tenth Massachusetts Battery, of operations
August 25.

No. 111.-Lieut. Edward S. Smith, Fifteenth New York Battery, commanding Tenth
Massachusetts Battery, of operations October 27.

No. 112.-Capt. Christian Woerner, Third New Jersey Battery, of operations Au

gust 12-27.

No. 113.-Capt. Nelson Ames, Battery G, First New York Light Artillery, of operations August 12-28.

No. 114.-Lieut. Frank Seymour, Battery L, Fourth New York Heavy Artillery, of operations August 12-27.

No. 115.-Capt. John E. Burton, Eleventh New York Battery, of operations August

12-26.

No. 116.-First Lieut. George K. Dauchy, Twelfth New York Battery, of operations August 12-27.

No. 117.-Capt. R. Bruce Ricketts, Battery F, First Pennsylvania Light Artillery, of operations August 12-27.

No. 118.-Capt. T. Fred. Brown, First Rhode Island Light Artillery, commanding Batteries A and B, of operations August 23–25.

No. 119.-Lieut. John W. Roder, Battery K, Fourth U. S. Artillery, of operations August 12-27 and October 26-28.

No. 120.-Lient. W. Butler Beck, Fifth U. S. Artillery, commanding Batteries C and I, of operations August 12-27 and October 25-27.

No. 121.-Maj. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren, U. S. Army, commanding Fifth Army Corps, of operations August 18-21 and 31, October 27-28, and Decem

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ber 7-12.

No. 122.-Brig. Gen. Samuel W. Crawford, U. S. Army, commanding Fifth Army Corps, of operations October 8.

No. 123.-Surg. T. Rush Spencer, U. S. Army, Medical Director.

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