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attery; Confed., Gen. Early's command. Losses: Union, 5 killed, 20 wounded. July 9, 1864: Monocacy, Md. Union, First and Second Brigades of Third Division, Sixth Corps, and detachment of Eighth Corps; Confed., Gordon's, Breckinridge's and Rodes' divisions under Gen. Jubal Early. Losses: Union, 98 killed, 594 wounded, 1188 missing; Confed. No record found. July 11-22, 1864: Rousseau's raid in Alabama and Georgia, including ten islands and Stone's Ferry, Ala., and Auburn and Chewa Station, Ga. Union, 8th Ind., 5th Iowa, 9th Ohio, 2d Ky., and 4th Tenn. Cav., Battery E 1st Mich. Artil.; Confed., Troops of Gen. J. E. Johnston's command. Losses: Union, 8 killed, 30 wounded; Confed., 95 killed and wounded. July 12, 1864: Fort Stevens, Washington, D. C. Union, Part of Nineteenth Corps, First and Second Divisions Sixth Corps, Marines, Home Guards, citizens, and convalescents; Confed., Gen. Early's command. Losses: Union, 280 killed an
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 3. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 5.38 (search)
. T. Morehead, Fifty-third North Carolina regiment, Greensboroa, North Carolina, Captain J. W. Fannin, Sixty-first Alabama regiment, Tuskegee, Alabama; Adjutant S. D. Steedman, First Alabama regiment, Steedman, South Carolina; Lieutenant-Colonel M. B. Locke, First Alabama regiment, Perote, Alabama; Lieutenant R. H. Wicker, Fifteenth Alabama regiment, Perote, Alabama; Adjutant William R. Holcombe, Ninth Alabama regiment, Athens, Georgia; Lieutenant W. A. Scott, Twelfth Georgia artillery, Auburn, Georgia; Lieutenant Frederick M. Makeig, Fourth Texas regiment, Bold Spring, Texas; Lieutenant William H. Effinger, Eleventh Virginia cavalry, Harrisonburg, Virginia; Major Norman R. Fitzhugh, Chief Quartermaster Cavalry Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, Scottsville, Virginia; Captain Julian P. Lee, A. A. General, Richmond, Virginia; Colonel R. C. Morgan, P. A. C. S., Lexington, Kentucky; Captain M. B. Perkins, Sixth Kentucky cavalry, Somerset, Kentucky; Captain C. C. Corbett, M. D., Fourteenth
Chapter 6: July 31 to October 19, 1863. Sulphur Springs as it was camp life the advance to Culpepper back to the Rappahannock Auburn our Maiden fight Centreville Fairfax Station ovation to Gen. Sickles shot for desertion. Sulphur Springs—or Warrenton Sulphur Springs, as they are usually termed to distinguish them front the more famous White Sulphur Springs in West Virginia—the spot selected for the encampment of the Third Corps, is situated some six miles from Warrenton, on the north bank of the Rappahannock River. Before the war it had been a fashionable watering-place for wealthy planters and their families, who frequented it in large numbers from the States farther south. The buildings originally consisted of two large hotels, one on either side of the road, with a capacity of eight hundred guests. Both of these were in ruins, having been set on fire by shells thrown, we were told, by Union troops the summer previous, to dislodge sharpshooters. It seems
in, IX., 323; march from, IX., 169, 171; capture of, IX., 170; ruins in, IX., 323; X., 92. Atlanta campaign Iii., 99, 104, 217; X., 90. Atlanta,, C. S. S. II., 336; VI., 75, 171, 272, 318; VII., 123, 139. Atlanta,, U. S. S., VI., 38. Atlanta constitution, IX., 31, 36, 394, 332. Atlanta and West Point R. R. III., 330. Atlantic and Western Railroad Ii., 274. Atlantic Monthly, IX, 23, 33. Atlee, Va., III., 82. Atzerodt, Ga., VII., 205. Auburn, Ga., III., 326. Auburn, Va.: Castle Murry at, IV., 92,243; band before headquarters, VIII., 235; Pleasonton's headquarters, VIII., 235. Augur, C. C., II., 320; III., 146; X., 193; 230. Augusta, Ga.: V., 150, 156, 162, 164, 166; powder mills and arsenal, at V., 170; Confederate powder works at, V., 183; ordnance works at, statistics of output, V., 189, 302; VIII., 70, 133; Clinch Rifles at, VIII., 139. Augusta, Ark., II., 350. Augusta,, U. S. S., II., 330; VI.,