The War of the Rebellion: v. 1-53 [serial no. 1-111] Formal reports, both Union and Confederate, of the first seizures of United States property in the southern states, and of all military operations in the field, with the correspondence, order and returns relating specially thereto. 1880-1898. 111 vU.S. Government Printing Office, 1890 - Confederate States of America Official records produced by the armies of the United States and the Confederacy, and the executive branches of their respective governments, concerning the military operations of the Civil War, and prisoners of war or prisoners of state. Also annual reports of military departments, calls for troops, correspondence between national and state governments, correspondence between Union and Confederate officials. The final volume includes a synopsis, general index, special index for various military divisions, and background information on how these documents were collected and published. Accompanied by an atlas. |
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Page 12
... wounded , and missing . We have taken eleven pieces of heavy ordnance and a large quantity of camp equipage . The enemy's loss in killed , wounded , and missing will not fall short of 200 . Very respectfully , your obedient servant ...
... wounded , and missing . We have taken eleven pieces of heavy ordnance and a large quantity of camp equipage . The enemy's loss in killed , wounded , and missing will not fall short of 200 . Very respectfully , your obedient servant ...
Page 50
... wounded slightly before Fort Wag- ner July 18 . Lieutenant Vidal , for efficiency under fire before Wagner and in the batteries on the 18th of July , and upon several other days . He also accompanied the expedition under Colonel Osborn ...
... wounded slightly before Fort Wag- ner July 18 . Lieutenant Vidal , for efficiency under fire before Wagner and in the batteries on the 18th of July , and upon several other days . He also accompanied the expedition under Colonel Osborn ...
Page 73
... wounded . Our loss was 1 officer and 5 privates killed , and 1 officer and 5 privates wounded . During the day , three monitors and three wooden gunboats shelled Battery Wagner , and in the evening a fifth monitor crossed the bar ...
... wounded . Our loss was 1 officer and 5 privates killed , and 1 officer and 5 privates wounded . During the day , three monitors and three wooden gunboats shelled Battery Wagner , and in the evening a fifth monitor crossed the bar ...
Page 76
... wounded . Throughout the day the garrison replied slowly to the terrific fire to which it was exposed , while Fort Sumter and Battery Gregg fired rapidly . The garrison of Battery Wagner consisted of the Charleston Battalion , the Fifty ...
... wounded . Throughout the day the garrison replied slowly to the terrific fire to which it was exposed , while Fort Sumter and Battery Gregg fired rapidly . The garrison of Battery Wagner consisted of the Charleston Battalion , the Fifty ...
Page 77
... wounded , and prisoners must have been 3,000 , as 800 bodies were interred in front of Battery Wagner on the following morning . The enemy's forces on this occasion con- sisted of troops from Connecticut , Pennsylvania , New Hampshire ...
... wounded , and prisoners must have been 3,000 , as 800 bodies were interred in front of Battery Wagner on the following morning . The enemy's forces on this occasion con- sisted of troops from Connecticut , Pennsylvania , New Hampshire ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance assault Assistant Adjutant-General attack August Battalion Battery Gregg Battery Simkins Battery Wagner Beauregard boats bomb-proof bombardment breaching Brig brigade Brigadier-General Brooke gun Capt Captain casualties Charleston Cheves Colonel columbiad commanding Company Creek Cumming's Point directed duty end of Morris Folly Island force Fort Johnson Fort Moultrie Fort Sumter Fort Wagner front garrison Georgia gunboats Hagood harbor headquarters Hilton Head howitzers infantry iron-clads Ironsides James Island Johnson July Keitt land batteries last night Lieut Lieutenant Light-House Inlet magazine marsh Military District monitors morning Morris Island mortar shells Moultrie o'clock obedient servant officers opened fire operations ordnance Otter Island parapet Parrott rifles party pickets position re-enforcements rear regiment respectfully Ripley Saint Helena Island sand-bags second parallel September sharpshooters shots were fired siege signal steamer Stono Sullivan's Island Sumter telegraph teries to-day transports troops vessels Volunteer Engineers Wagner and Gregg wounded yards