Glass Ef interest pertain- ing to the battle within the park or its vicinity, and the said commission in estab- lishing this military park shall also have authority, under the direction of the Secre- tary of War, to employ such labor and services and to obtain such supplies and material as may be necessary to the establishment of the said park under such regula- tions as he may consider best for the interest of the < mvcrnnient, and the Secretary of War shall make and enforce all needed regulations for the care of the park. Sec. (>. That it shall be lawful for any State that had troops engaged in the battle of Shiloh to enter upon the lands of the Shiloh National Military Park for the purpose of ascertaining and tnarkingthe lines of battle of its troops engaged therein: Provided, That before any such lines are permanently designated the position of the lines and the proposed methods of marking them by monuments, tablets, or otherwise shall be submitted to and approved by the Secretary of War, and all such lines, designs and inscriptions for the same shall first receive the written approval of the Secretary, which approval shall be based upon formal written reports, which must be made to him in each case by the commissioners of the park: Provided, That no discrimination shall be made against any State as to the manner of designating lines, but any grant made to any State by the Secretary of War may be used by any other State. Sec. 7. That if any person shall, except by permission of the Secretary of War, destroy, mutilate, deface, injure, or remove any monument, column, statues, memo- rial structures, or work of art that shall be erected or placed upon the grounds of the park by lawful authority, or shall destroy or remove any fence, railing, inclosure, or other work for the protection or ornament of said park, or any portion thereof, or shall destroy, cut, hack, bark, break down, or otherwise injure any tree, bush, or shrubbery that may be growing upon said park, or shall cut down or fell or remove any timber, battle relic, tree or trees growing or being upon said park, or hunt within the limits of the park, or shall remove or dest r< >y any 1 least works, earthw < >rks. walls, or other defenses or shelter on any part thereof constructed by the armies formerly engaged in the battles on the lands or approaches to the park, any person so offending and found guilty thereof, before any justice of the peace of the county in which the offense may be committed or any court of competent jurisdiction shall for each and every such offense forfeit and pay a line, in the discretion of the justice, according to the aggravation of the offense, oi not less than five nor more than fifty dollars, one- half for the use of the park and the other half to the informer, to be enforced and recovered before such justice in like manner as debts of like nature are now by law- recoverable in the several counties where the offense may be committed. Sec. 8. That to enable the Secretary of War to begin to carry out the purpose of this Act, including the condemnation or purchase of the necessary land, marking the boundaries of the park, opening or repairing necessary roads, restoring the field to its condition at the time of the battle, maps and surveys, and the pay and expenses of the commissioners and their assistant, the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars, or such portion thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated, out of any moneys in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, and disbursements under this Act shall require the approval of the Secretary of War, ajid he shall make annual report of the same to Congress. Approved, December 27, 1894. TO SHILOH SOLDIERS. The Shiloh National Military Park was established by act of Congress in order that, "The armies of the southwest may have the history of one of their memorable battles preserved on the ground where they fought." It is the desire of the commission having this work in charge that this history shall be complete, impartial, and correct, so that when the monuments of granite and bronze shall have been erected their inscriptions shall publish to the world nothing but the truth. To secure this accuracy all reports have been carefully studied and compared. The records at Washington have been thoroughly searched and many who participated in the battle have been interviewed. Unfortunately many organizations that served at Shiloh failed to make official reports; others made such meager statements of service that it is difficult to give credit that is doubtless due to gallant organizations. It is, therefore, desired that the statements herein made 1 »e earnestly studied by every survivor of Shiloh, particularly in regard to his own organization, and that he report any errors or omissions found in these statements to "Secretary, Shiloh National Military Park Commission, Pittsburg Landing, Tennessee," who will investigate the same ami make such corrections as the commission may direct with a view of the publication of a revised edition of this report. It is suggested that survivors examine official and other reports carefully and consult surviving comrades so as to be su re they are right before asking corrections. Cornelius Cadle, Cltairman, Shiloh National Military Park Commvadon. ORGANIZATION OF THE COMMISSION. Under the provisions of the aet of Congress approved December 27, 1894, the Secretary of War appointed as commissioners: Col. Cornelius Cadle, of Cincinnati, Ohio, for Army of the Tennessee, chairman; Gen. Don Carlos Buell, of Paradise, Ky., for Army of the Ohio; Col. Robert F. Looney, of Memphis, Tenn., for Army of the Mississippi; Maj. D. W. Reed, of Chicago, 111., secretary and historian, and Capt. James W. Irwin, of Savannah, Tenn., agent for the purchase of land. The commission met and organized April 2, 1895, at Pittsburg Land- ing, Tenn., and at once entered upon the discharge of its duties, under the direction of the Secretary of War. Mr. James M. Riddell was appointed clerk of the commission. Mr. Atwell Thompson, civil engineer, of Chattanooga, Tenn., was employed to take charge of the work. Under his direction surveys were made and parallel lines run across the field, from north to south, every 200 feet, upon which stakes were set 200 feet apart. From this survey levels were taken and a contoured topographical map made of all the land within the limits of the park. Gen. Don Carlos Buell died on November 19, 1898, and Maj. J. H. Ashcraf t, late of the Twenty-sixth Kentucky Volunteers, was appointed in his place. Col. Robert F. Looney died on November 19, 1899, and Col. Josiah Patterson, late of the First Alabama Cavalry, was appointed in his place. From official maps and reports, information received from residents, personal recollections of survivors of the battle and other information, roads, fields, and camps were restored; battle lines and positions of troops located and shown on the map and marked by historical tablets on the ground. Four maps have been made which show the field of operations, the approaches to Shiloh, and a map of each day's battle. Copies of these maps accompany this report. The progress of the work has been fully reported each year by the chairman of the commission and his reports published in the annual report of the Secretary of War. 6 SHILOH CAMPAIGN AND BATTLE. FIFLX) OF OPERATIONS.' On the 1st day of January, 1862, Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston was in command of all the Confederate forces of Tennessee and Kentucky. His troops occupied a line of defense extending- from Columbus, Ivy., through Forts Henry and Donelson to Bowling Green, Ky., where General Johnston had his headquarters. Gen. H. W. Halleck at that date commanded the Department of the Missouri with headquarters at St. Louis, and Gen. D. C. Buell com- manded the Department of the Ohio with headquarters at Louisville, Ky. The Cumberland River formed the boundary separating the Departments of the Missouri and the Ohio. Various plans had been canvassed by Generals Halleck and Buell, participated in by the general in chief, for an attack upon the Con- federate line. General Halleck had asked to have General Buell's arm} 7 transferred to him, or at least placed under his command, claim- ing that without such union and an army of at least 60,000 men under one commander, it would be impossible to break the well-established lines of General Johnston/' Before such union could be effected, and before General Halleck had received a reply to his request, General Grant asked for and received permission to attack the line at Fort Henry on the Tennessee River. 6 ' Assisted by the gunboat fleet of Commodore Foote, Grant captured Fort Henry on the 6th of February, and then moving upon Fort Donelson captured that place with 15,000 prisoners on the 16th. The loss of these forts broke General Johnston's line at its center and com- pelled him to evacuate Columbus and Bowling Green, abandon Ten- nessee and Kentucky to the Union Army and seek a new line of defense on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad. General Halleck was displeased with Grant because he sent a division of troops into BuelPs department at Clarksville. rf This displeasure was increased when he learned that General Grant had gone to Nash- ville for consultation with General Buell. Halleck directed the with- drawal of Smith's division from Clarksville, suspended General Grant from command, and ordered him to Fort Henry to await orders/ He then placed Gen. C. F. Smith in command of all the troops with orders « See map of field of operations. 6 No. 8 War Records, pp. 508-510. Reference to War Records will be given by serial numbers, 10 War Records being volume 10; 11 War Records being part 2 of volume 10. c\ Grant, p. 287. d Halleck's telegram to C'ullum, March 1, 1862. e 11 War Records, p. 3. 7 SHILOH NATIONAL MILITARY PARK MAP OF THE FIELD OF | OPERATIONS mOM WHICH THE ARMIES WERE CONCENTRATED AT SHILOH MARCH AND APRIL, 1862. PREPARED. UNDER THE DIRECTION OF THE SECRETARY OF WAR, BY THE SHILOH NATIONAL MILITARY PARK COMMISSION FROM OFFICIAL MAPS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT DRAWN BY ATWELL THOMPSON, B.E ENGINEER IN CHAR CE 1901 to proceed up the Tennessee River and to make an effort to break the Confederate line on the Memphis and Charleston Railroad at some place near Florence." General Smith's advance reached Savannah. Tenn., March L3, 1862. Having determined to make that point his base of operations, he landed the troops that accompanied his advance, and sent boats buck for supplies and the remainder of his army. (Jen. W. T. Sherman had organized a division of new troops while he was in command at Paducah. With these he was ordered to report to General Smith. He reached Savannah on the 14th of March and was ordered by General Smith to proceed up the river to some point near Eastport and from there make an attempt to break the Memphis and Charleston Railroad in the vicinity of Burnsville, Miss/' Previous to this time a gunboat fleet had passed up the Tennessee River as far as Florence. At Pittsburg Landing this fleet encountered a small force of Confederates consisting of the Eighteenth Louisiana Infantry, Gibson's battery of artillery, and some cavalry. The gun- boats shelled the position and drove away the Confederates. A burst- ing shell set tire to and destroyed one of the three buildings at the landing. The fleet proceeded up the river to Florence and on its return landed a small party at Pittsburg Landing to investigate. This party found a dismounted 32-pounder gun on the river bluff, and about 1 mile out, a hospital containing several Confederate soldiers that had been wounded a few days before in the engagement with the fleet. Near the hospital a Confederate picket post stopped their advance and the party returned to the boats. In the report made by the officer in command of this naval expedi- tion is found the first mention of Pittsburg Landing, that little hamlet on the Tennessee River so soon to become historic. When General Sherman's command was passing Pittsburg Landing, Lieutenant Gwin of the U. S. gunboat Tyler pointed out to General Sherman the position that had been occupied by the Confederate bat- teiy, and informed him that there w T as a good road from that point to Corinth. That it was, in fact, the landing place for all goods shipped by river to and from Corinth. General Sherman at once reported these facts to General Smith and asked that the place be occupied in force while the demonstration was being made against Burnsville. In compliance with this request, General Hurlbut's division was at once dispatched by boats to Pittsburg Landing. General Sherman proceeded up the river and landed his division at the mouth of Yellow Creek, a few miles below Eastport, and made an attempt to march to Burnsville. Heavy rains and high water com- pelled his return to the boats. Finding no other accessible landing place he dropped down to Pittsburg Landing, where lie found Hurl- but's division on boats. Sherman reported to General Smith that Eastport was occupied in force by the Confederates, and that Pittsburg Landing was the first point below Eastport that was above water, so that a landing of troops could be made. He was directed to disembark his division and Hurl- but's and put them in camp far enough back to afford room for the other divisions of the army to encamp near the river. "7 War Records, p. 674; 11 War Records, p. >>. &10 War Records, p. 22. 9 On the 16th of March Sherman landed a part of his division, and accompanied by Colonel McPherson, of General Halleck's .stall, marched out as far as Monterey, 11 miles, dispersing* a Confederate cavalry camp. Returning to the river he spent two days in disem- barking his troops and selecting camps, and on the 19th moved out and put his troops into the positions to which he had assigned them, about 2i miles from the landing. Pittsburg Landing, on the left bank of the Tennessee River, 8 miles above Savannah, was at that time simply a landing place for steam- boats trading along the river. Its high bluff, at least 80 feet above the water at its highest flood, afforded a safe place for the deposits of products unloaded from, or to be loaded upon, the boats. From this landing a good ridge road ran southwesterly to Corinth, Miss., 22 miles awaj\ One mile out from the river the Corinth road crossed another road running north and south parallel with the river, and connecting Savannah below with Hamburg, 4 miles above Pittsburg Landing. One quarter of a mile beyond this crossing the Corinth road forked, the part known as Eastern Corinth road r inning nearly south until it intersected the Bark road, 3 miles from the river. The other, or main road, running due west from the fork, crossed the Hamburg and Purdy road 2 miles from the river, and then turn- ing southwest, passed Shiloh Church just2£ miles from the river. At a point 5 miles oat this main road intersected the Bark road at the southwest corner of what is now the lands of the Shiloh National Military Park. The Bark road, running nearly due east to Hamburg, forms the southern boundary of the park. On the south side of the Bark road ridge is Lick Creek, which has its rise near Monterey, and empties into the Tennessee about 2 miles above Pittsburg Landing. North of the main Corinth road, and at an average of about 1 mile from it, is Owl Creek, which flows north- easterly and empties into Snake Creek at the pdint where the Savannah road crosses it. Snake Creek empties into the Tennessee River about 1 mile below Pittsburg Landing. All these streams flow through flat, muddy bottom lands and are, in the spring of the .year, practically impassable, and in April, 1862, could not be crossed except at two or three places where bridges were maintained. These streams therefore formed an excellent protection against an attack upon either flank of an army encamped between them. The general surface of the land along the Corinth road is about on the same level, but is cut up on either side by deep ravines an water courses leading into the creeks. In many of these ravines are running streams with the usual marsh}^ margins. In 1862 this plateau was covered with open forest with frequent thick undergrowth and an occasional clearing of a few acres surround- ing the farmhouse of the owner. Sherman selected grounds for his division camps just behind a stream called Shiloh Branch, McDowell's brigade on the right, with his right on Owl Creek at the bridge where the Hamburg and Purdy road crosses the creek. Buckland's brigade next in line to the left, with his left at Shiloh Church. Hildebrand's brigade to the left of the church. Stuart's brigade, detached from others, to the extreme left of the line at the point where the Savannah and Hamburg and the Purdy and Hamburg roads unite just before they cross Lick Creek. 10 Hurlbut's division formed its camp 1 mile in roar of Sherman's, near the crossingof the Corinth and the Hamburg and Savannah roads. On the 11th day of March Hie Departments of the Missouri and the Ohio were consolidated under the name of the Department of the Mis- sissippi, and Maj. (ien. 11. W. Ilalleck was assigned to the command, giving him from that date the control he had sought — of both armies then operating- in Tennessee. General Smith, about the time of his arrival at Savannah, had received an injury to his leg while stepping from a gunboat into a yawl. This injury, apparently insignificant at first, soon took such serious form that the General was obliged to relinquish command of the troops, and General Grant was restored to duty and ordered by General Halleck to repair to Savannah and take command of the troops in that vicinity. Upon his arrival at Savan- nah, March IT, General Grant found his army divided, a part on either side of the Tennessee River. He at once reported to General Halleck" the exact situation, and in answer was directed to " destroy the railroad connections at Corinth." 6 To carry out this order General Grant transferred the remainder of his army, except a small garrison for Savannah, to the west side of the river, concentrating the First, Second, Fourth, and Fifth divisions at Pittsburg Landing, and the Third at Crump's Landing, 6 miles below. General McClernand with the First Division formed his camp in rear of Sherman's right brigades. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace, com- manding the Second Division, encamped to the right of Hurlbut, between Corinth road and Snake Creek. A new division, the Sixth, just organizing under General Prentiss out of new troops, went into camp as the regiments arrived between Hildebrand's and Stuart's brigades of Sherman's divison, its center on the eastern Corinth road. Gen. Lew. Wallace, commanding the Third Division, placed his first brigade at Crump's, his second brigade at Stony Lonesome, and his thiid brigade at Adamsville, 5 miles out on the Purely road. On March 10 General Halleck wrote General McClellan: "I propose going to the Tennessee in a few days to take personal command. " c Pending his arrival at the front his orders to Smith, to Sherman, and to Grant were: "My instructions not to bring on an engagement must be strictly obeyed;" d but when informed by General Grant that the contemplated attack upon Corinth would make a general engagement inevitable, Halleck at once ordered, "By all means keep your forces together until you connect with General Buell. Don't let the enemy draw you into an engagement now."'' To this General Grant replied: "All troops have been concentrated near Pittsburg Landing. No movement of troops will be made except to advance Sherman to Pea Ridge. "^ Sherman made a reconnoissance toward Pea Ridge March 24 and drove some cavalry across Liek Creek. He bivouacked at Chambers's plantation that night, and returned to camp next morning. On the 31st, with two regiments of infantry, a section of artillery, and a company of cavalry, Sherman went up to Eastport. Finding the Confederate works there and at Chickasaw abandoned, he sent his « 1 1 War Records, p. 45. i> 1 1 War Records, p. 46. ''11 War Records, p. 24. ''7 War Records, p. 674; 10 War Records, p. 25; 11 War Records, p. 41 f 11 War Records, pp. 50, 51. /ll War Records, p. 57. 11 scouts toward Iuka. Confederate cavalry was encountered, and the command returned to Pittsburg Landing. The Army of the Tennessee, commanded by Maj. Gen. U. 8. Grant, was, on the 5th of April, 1862, composed of six divisions. The First, commanded by Maj. Gen. John A. McClernand; the Second, by Brig. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace; the Third, by Maj. Gen. Lew. Wallace; the Fourth, by Brig. Gen. S. A. Hurlbut; the Fifth, by Brig. Gen. W. T. Sherman, and the Sixth, by Brig. Gen. B. M. Prentiss. Generals McClernand, C. F. Smith, and Lew. Wallace had been promoted major- generals March 21, 1862. Official notice of such promotion was sent to General Grant by General Halleck from St. Louis April 5/' Pre- vious to this notice of promotion the order of rank of the brigadiers was as follows: Sherman, McClernand, Hurlbut, Prentiss, C. F. Smith, Lew. Wallace, W. H. L. Wallace. General Smith, until re- lieved by General Grant, March 17, was in command by order of General McClellan. 6 The camps of Sherman and Pren*tiss formed the front line about 2^- miles from Pittsburg Landing and extended in a semicircle from Owl Creek on the right to Lick Creek on the left. One company from each regiment was advanced as a picket 1 mile in front of regimental camps. By the official returns of April 5, 1862, there were, in the five divisions of the Army of the Tennessee at Pittsburg Landing, present for duty, c infantry, artillery, and cavalry, officers and men, 39,830; in the Third Division, at Crump's Landing, present for duty, officers and men, 7,564. On the evening of the 5th the advance of General Buell's army arrived at Savannah, and in one day more would have united with the Army of the Tennessee, ready for the advance on Corinth, as contem- plated and announced in General Halleck\s programme. When General Johnston withdrew his army from Kentucky and Tennessee, after the fall of Fort Donelson, he established his new line of operations along- the Memphis and Charleston Railroad with his right at Chattanooga and his left on the Mississippi at Fort Pillow. On this line he was reenforced by Generals Polk and Beauregard from Columbus and West Tennessee, and by General Bragg from Pensacola and Mobile, and had ordered Van Dorn, from Little Rock, Ark., to report with his army at Corinth, Miss. As early as March 9, General Ruggles was placed in command at Corinth and was ordered to f)ut his troops in marching order and to commence a line of intrench - ments around the town. On the 29th of March General Johnston issued a general order con- solidating the armies of Kentuck\^ and Mississippi, and some independ- ent commands, into the "Army of the Mississippi" of which he assumed the command, naming Gen. G. T. Beauregard as second in command and Maj. Gen. Braxton Bragg as chief of staff. Subse- quently he organized his army into four corps. The First Corps commanded by Maj. Gen. Leonidas Polk; the Second Corps commanded by Maj. Gen. Braxton Bragg; the Third Corps commanded b}^ Maj. Gen. W. J. Hardee, and the Reserve Corps commanded by Brig. Gen. J. C. Breckinridge. " 1 1 War Records, p. 94. Ml War Records, p. 82. <' Note r. 12 One division of the First Corps, Cheatham's, was at Bethel and Purely; a brigade of the Second Corps was at Monterey; the Reserve Corps ut Burnsville; the cavalry nearer the Union lines. All other troops concentrated at ( orinth." General Johnston had been depressed by the censure of the South- ern press, and as late as March 18 offered to relinquish the command of the army to General Beauregard. Reassured by expressions of confidence by Mr. Davis, he resolved to retain command and, if possi- ble, to regain the confidence of the people by taking the offensive and attacking- Grant's army at Pittsburg Landing, hoping to defeat that army before it could be reenforced by General Buell. Hearing that General Buell was nearing Savannah, General John- ston determined to attack at once, without waiting the arrival of Van Dorn. Accordingly, on the 3d of April he issued orders for the for- ward movement, directing his army to move by the several roads and concentrate at Mickey's, 8 miles from Pittsburg Landing, so as to be ready to attack at sunrise on the morning of the 5th. Heavy rains, bad roads, and the delays incident to marching large columns with wagon trains and artillery over muddy roads, prevented the assembly of the army at Mickey's until nearly night of the 5th. It was then determined to delay the attack until daylight next morning* The aggregate present for duty, officers and men of the Confederate Army, infantry, artillery, and cavalry, assembled at Mickey's April 5, 1862, as shown by official reports, was 43,968. 6 This army General Johnston put in line of battle and bivouacked Saturday night in the following order: Major General Hardee's corps on the first or advanced line, with Cleburne's brigade on the left, its left flank at Widow Howell's, near Winningham Creek. Wood's brigade next to the right, with his right on the main Pittsburg and Corinth road, and just in rear of the Wood's field. Shaver's brigade on right of Pittsburg and Corinth road, extending the line nearly to Bark road. As Hardee's line thus deployed did not occupy all the spaee to Lick Creek, as desired, Gladden's brigade from Withers's division of Second Corps was added to Hardee's right, extending the line across Bark road. Major General Bragg's corps was deployed 800 3 T ards in rear of the first line, with Ruggles's division on the left and Withers's division on the right, in the following order of brigades from left to right: Pond, Anderson, Gibson, Jackson, and Chalmers. This second line over- lapped the first and extended beyond Hardee's on both flanks, Jack- son's left flank resting on the Bark road. The corps of Generals Polk and Breckinridge were formed in column by brigades in rear of the second line. Wharton's and Brewer's cav- alry were on the left flank, guarding the roads toward Stantonville. Clanton's cavalry was on the right front, Avery's, Forrest's and Adams's cavalry at Greer's Ford on Lick Creek. Other cavalry organizations were attached to the different corps. General Johnston's headquarters were established at the forks of the Bark and Pittsburg roads. Pickets were sent out from the first line. The Third Mississippi, commanded by Major Hardcastle, was on such duty in front of Wood's brigade, his reserve post, at the corner where Wood's and Fraley's fields join. "See map of Territory between Pittsburg Landing and Corinth. ''Note r. 13 THE BATTLE. « During the Confederate advance from Monterey on the 3d there had been skirmishing between the cavalry of the two armies, and on the ith one of Buckland's picket posts was captured. Buckland sent out two companies in pursuit of the captors. These companies were attacked and surrounded by Confederate cavalry, but were rescued by Buckland coming to their relief with his whole regiment. On Satur- day Generals Prentiss and Sherman each sent out reconnoitering par- ties to the front. Neither of these parties developed the enemy in force, but reported such evidences of cavalry, that pickets of both divisions were doubled, and General Prentiss, being still apprehensive of attack, sent out at 3 o'clock Sunday morning three companies of the Twenty-fifth Missouri, under Major Powell of that regiment, to again reconnoiter well to the front. Major Powell marched to the right and front, passing between the Rhea and Seay fields, and at 4.55 a. m. struck Hardcastle\s pickets and njeceived their lire. The fire was returned by Powell and a sharp engagement was had between these outposts, continuing, as Hard- castle says, one hour and a half, until 6.30 a. m., when he saw his brigade formed in his rear and fell back to his place in line. Wood's brigade, advancing, drove Powell back to the Seay field, where he was reinforced by four companies of the Sixteenth Wiscon- sin, that had been on picket near by, and by live companies of the Twenty -first Missouri under Colonel Moore, who at once took com- mand and sent back to camp for the remainder of his regiment. This force, lighting and retreating slowly, was reenforced at south- east corner of the Rhea field by all of Peabody's brigade. Peabody succeeded in holding the Confederates in check until about 8 o'clock, when he fell back to the line of his camp, closely followed by Shaver's jrigade and the right of Wood's brigade. While Peabpdy's brigade was thus engaged, General Prentiss had advanced Miller's brigade to the south side of Spain field, and placed ilickenlooper's battery to the left and Munch's battery to the right of the Eastern Corinth road. In this position he was attacked by Glad- den's brigade and by the left of Chalmers's brigade, that had advanced to the front line. These Confederate brigades, after a stubborn fight, in which Gladden was mortally wounded, drove Miller back to his line of camps at the same time that Peabody was driven back to his. In their several camps Prentiss formed his regiments again and was vig- orously attacked by Gladden's and Shaver's brigades, assisted on their left by a part of Wood's brigade, and on the right by Chalmers. At 9 o'clock Prentiss was driven from his. second position with the loss of the entire division camp, two guns of Hickenlooper's battery, and many killed and wounded left' on the field. Among the killed was Colonel Peabody, the commander of the First Brigade of Pren- tiss's division. While the right of Hardee's line was engaged with Prentiss his left had attacked the brigades of Hildebrand and Buckland, of Sherman's division. These brigades had formed in line in front of their camps and behind Shiloh Branch, with Barrett's battery at Shiloh Church and Waterhouse's battery to the left, behind the camp of the Fifty- «See maps of first and second days. 14 third Ohio. The Third Brigade of McClernand's division was brought up and formed in support of Sherman's left flank and of Waterhouse's battery. In the Confederate advance the left of Wood's brigade had been slightly engaged with the Fifty-third Ohio, which easily gave way, when Wood obliqued to the right, to avoid Waterhouse's bat- tery, and, following Prentiss, passed the left Hank of Hildebrand's brigade, then left wheeled to the attack of McClernand's Third Brig- ade. Cleburne's brigade, in attempting to cross the marshy ground of Shiloh Branch, received the concentrated tire of the Third and Fourth brigades of Sherman's division, and after two or three unsuc- cessful efforts to dislodge them, in which his regiments lost very heavily — the Sixth Mississippi having over 70 per cent killed and wounded — he was obliged to give place to Anderson's brigade of Bragg's corps, which was in like manner repulsed with severe loss. Johnson's and Russell's brigades of Polk's corps now came up together. Russell on the right, overlapping Sherman's left, and Johnson to the left across the Corinth road. The reoganized parts of the brigades of Cleburne and Anderson joining Russell and Johnson, the four brigades, assisted by Wood's brigade, advanced, and at 10 o'clock drove Sherman's two brigades, and the Third Brigade of McClernand's division back across the Purdy road with the loss of three guns of Waterhouse's battery and of the camps of the three brigades. During the contest Confederate Generals Clark, commanding a division, and Johnson, commanding a brigade, were severely wounded, and Colonel Raith, commanding McClernand's Third Brigade, was mortally wounded. The capture of the three guns of Waterhouse's battery is claimed by the Thirteenth Tennessee of Russell's brigade, and General Polk seems to concede the claim, though it appears that several regiments were attacking the battery from the front when the Thirteenth Tennessee moved by the right flank and approaching the battery from its left rear reached it before those from the front. General Vaughan, of the Thirteenth Tennessee, says that when his regiment reached these guns a dead Union officer lay near them, and keeping guard over his body was a pointer dog that refused to allow the Confederates to approach the body. Pond's brigade of Bragg's corps had engaged McDowell's brigade, in conjunction with Anderson's attack on Buckland, and had succeeded in gaining the bridge at McDowell's right flank but had not become seriously engaged when Sherman ordered McDowell to retire and form junction with his Third and Fourth brigades which were then falling back from Shiloh Church. McDowell therefore abandoned his camp to Pond without a contest. After the capture of Prentiss's camps Chalmers's and Jackson's brig- ades from Bragg's corps were ordered to the right to attack the ex- treme left of the Union line. Preceded by Clanton's cavalry these brigades moved by the flank down the Bark road until the head of the column was at the swampy grounds of Lick Creek, then forming line of battle and placing Gage's and Girardey's batteries upon the bluff south of Locust Grove Creek they compelled Stuart, w T ho was without artillery, to leave his camp and form his lines to left and rear in the timber. Here he held Chalmers in a fierce light until about 2 o'clock when he fell back to the landing, abandoning the last of Sherman's camps. Jackson's attack, as he came across the creek, fell upon McArthur's brigade, consisting of the Ninth and Twelfth Illinois, sup- 15 ported on the left by the Fiftieth Illinois .and by Willard's battery in the rear. McArthur, in a stubborn contest in which the Ninth Illinois lost 60 per cent of the men engaged, held his ground until Jackson was reinforced by Bowen's brigade of Breckinridge's corps, when McArthur fell back. When Sherman and Prentiss discovered that they were being attacked by the Confederates in force they asked reenforcements from the divis- ions in their rear. McClernand sent his third brigade to reenforce Sherman's left, and Schwartz's battery to assist Buckland. He then formed his First and Second brigades along the Pittsburg road in front of his headquarters; Marsh's brigade, with Burrows's battery on the right; Hare's brigade to the left behind the Review field; McAllister's battery at the north- west corner of said field, and Dresser's battery at Water Oaks Pond. On this line the Third brigade rallied when it fell back from Sherman's line. Veatch's brigade of Hurlbut's division was sent to reenforce McCler- nand and formed behind Burrows's buttery. Hurl but marched his other brigades to the Peach Orchard and formed line of battle with Williams's brigade facing south and Lauman's brigade facing west. The batteries, Mann's, Ross's, and Myer's, all in the held behind the infantry. W. H. L. Wallace's First Brigade, commanded by Colonel Tuttle, moved out on the Eastern Corinth road and formed on the east side of the Duncan held in an old sunken road. McArthurs brigade was dis- united. The Eighty-first Ohio and the Fourteenth Missouri were sent to guard the bridge over Snake Creek; the Thirteenth Missouri to reenforce McDowell's brigade and McArthur, in person with the Ninth and Twelfth Illinois and Willard's battery, went to the support of Stuart and formed on his right rear, and at the left of Hurlbut's division, just east of the Peach Orchard. Of Sweeny's brigade, the Seventh and Fifty-eighth Illinois formed on Tuttle's right connecting it with McClernand's left. The Fiftieth Illinois was sent to McArthur. The other regiments were held in reserve until about noon when the Eighth Iowa formed on Tuttle's left to till a gap between Wallace and Prentiss. The Fifty-seventh Illinois went to the extreme left, and the Fifty -second Illinois reported to McClernand at his sixth position just east of Tilghman Creek. Batteries D, H, and K, First Missouri Light Artillery, were placed along the ridge in rear of Tuttle. Prentiss rallied his broken division, not over S0<> men, oil Hurlbut's right con- necting it with Wallace's left. In the early morning, General Grant at Savannah heard the firing and directed General Nelson, of the Army of the Ohio, to march his division along the east bank of the Tennessee to the point opposite Pittsburg. Then, leaving a request for General Buell to hurry his troops forward as rapidly as possible, he hastened by boat to join his army. Arriving upon the held at about the time that Prentiss was driven from his camp, he immediately dispatched orders to Gen. Lew. Wallace to bring his division to the battlefield. There has ever since been a dispute as to the terms of this order and the time of its delivery. It is admitted that General Wallace received an order, and that he started his command at about 12 o'clock by a road leading into the Hamburg and Purdy road west of the bridge over Owl Creek on the right of Sherman's camps. This bridge was abandoned by McDowell and held 16 by the Confederates at LO o'clock. An aide from General Grant over- took Wallace on this road about 3 o'clock and turned him back to the Savannah and Hamburg, or river road, by which he reached the bat- tlefield about 7 o'clock" p. m. In the movements of the Confederate troops in the morning Gibson's brigade of Bragg'scorps had followed Shaver's brigade and had halted just inside the line of camps. This had separated Gibson from Ander- son by the length of a brigade; into this space Bragg directed Stephens's brigade, of Polk's corps, and it entered the line of camps in rear of Wood's brigade. Stewart's brigade, also of Polk's corps, was sent to the right and entered the line of camps in rear of Gladden's brigade. When Prentiss was driven back General Johnston ordered his reserve into action by sending Trabue forward on the Pittsburg Landing road to Shiloh Church, while Bowen and Statham were moved down the Bark road and formed line of battle south of the Peach Orchard to the left rear of Jackson and completing the line to where Gladden's brigade, now commanded by Adams, was resting near Prentiss's headquarters camp. Following the capture of the guns of Waterhouses's battery and the retreat of Sherman and Raith to the Purdy road, Wood's and Shaver's brigades, with Swett's battery, were ordered to left wheel. Stewart's brigade was sent by left flank along the rear of Peabody's camp to Wood's left where three of the regiments took their places in line, while the Fourth Tennessee, supported by the Twelfth Tennessee, from Russell's brigade, went into line between Wood's and Shaver's brigades- Stanford's battery took position in the camp of the Fourth Illinois Cav- alry. Joining this force on its left were the somewhat disorganized brigades of Cleburne, Anderson, Johnson, and Russell. General Polk was personally directing their movements and led them forward, with- out waiting for perfect organization, in pursuit of Sherman's retreat- ing brigades. This combined force of seven brigades moved to the attack of McClernand and Sherman in their second position along the Pittsburg and Purdy road. The right of this attacking force, extend- ing beyond McClernand's left, became engaged with W. H. L. Wallace's troops near Duncan House, while Stephens's brigade of Polk's Corps engaged the left of Tuttle's brigade and Prentiss's division in the Hor- nets' Nest. At the same time Gladden attacked Lauman on west side of the Peach Orchard. In these attacks Generals Hindman and Wood were disabled, and the Confederates in front of Wallace, Prentiss, and Lauman were repulsed. The attack upon McClernand and Sherman was successful, and drove these commands back to the center of Marsh's brigade camp, where they made a short stand at what McClernand calls his third line, and then retired to the field at the right of that camp, to the fourth line. The third and fourth brigades of Sherman's division retired to the landing, and his first brigade, McDowell's, took position on McCler- nand's right. In the repulse of McClernand from his second and third line he had lost Burrows's entire battery of six guns, which was taken by AYood's brigade; also one gun of McAllister's batteiy, taken by the Fourth Tennessee, and two guns of Schwartz's battery and four guns of Dres- ser's battery; part of these, perhaps all, are claimed by the One hun- dred and fifty-fourth Tennessee. Rallying in camp of Hare's brigade, McClernand, with McDowell's 17 brigade on his right, checked the Confederate advance, and then, by a united countercharge, at 12 o'clock, recovered his second brigade camp and his own headquarters, and captured Cobb's Kentucky batter}-. McClernand gives the Eleventh Iowa and the Eleventh and Twentieth Illinois the credit for the capture of this battery. In the forward movement the Sixth Iowa and the Forty-sixth Ohio of McDowell's brigade, and Thirteenth Missouri of McArthur's brigade, became engaged with Trabue's Confederate brigade in a tierce battle, of which Trabue says: The combat here was a severe one. I fought the enemy an hour and a quarter, killing and wounding 400 or 500 of the Forty-sixth Ohio Infantry, as well as of another Ohio regiment, a Missouri regiment, and some Iowa troops. * * * I lost here many men and several officers. The number killed, wounded, and missing of the Forty-sixth Ohio at the battle of Shiloh, both da3 T s, was 246. But of the three regi- ments opposed to Trabue there were 510 killed, wounded, and missing; most of them were doubtless lost in this conflict. So that Trabue may not have seriously erred in his statement. At the time that McClernand fell back from his second position, General Stewart took command of Wood's and Shaver's brigades, and with the Fourth Tennessee of his own brigade moved to the right and renewed the attack upon Tuttle and Prentiss. Meeting a severe repulse he withdrew at 12 o'clock, with the Fourth Tennessee, to the assistance of the force in front of McClernand. At the same time Shaver's and Wood's brigades retired for rest and ammunition, and Stephens's brigade moved to the right and joined Breckinridge south of the Peach Orchard. General Bragg then brought up Gibson's brigade, which had been resting near Peabody's camp, and sent it in four separate charges against the position held by Prentiss and Tuttle. Gibson's brigade was shattered in their useless charges and retired from the field. While Bragg was directing these several movements, Generals Polk and Hardee had renewed the attack upon McClernand and in a contest lasting two hours had driven him back once more to the camp of his First Brigade where he maintained his position until 2.30 p. m., when he fell back across the valley of Tilghman Creek to his sixth line, abandoning the last of his camps. About 12 o'clock General Johnston, having gotten his reserve in position south of the Peach Orchard, assumed personal command of the right wing of his army and directed a combined forward movement, intending to break the Union left where Chalmers and Jackson had been engaged since about 10 o'clock, in an unsuccessful tight with Stuart and McArthur. Bowen's brigade was sent to support Jackson and was closely followed, en echelon to the left, by Statham's, Stephens's, and Gladden's brigades in an attack upon Hurlbut in the Peach Orchard. Stuart, hard pressed by Chalmers and threatened on the flank by Clan- ton's cavalry, was, as we have seen, the first to yield, and falling back left McArthur's flank exposed, compelling him and Hurlbut to fall back to the north side of the Pencil Orchard. As Hurlbut's First Brig- ade fell back, Lauman's brigade on its right was transferred to the left of the division in support of McArthur. Hurlbut's division as then formed stood at a right angle with the line of Prentiss and Wallace. At 2. 30 p. m. , while personal ly directing the movements of his reserve, General Johnston was strucK by a mime ball and almost instantly killed. 605a— 03 2 is The death of the Confederate commander in chief caused :t relaxation of effort on that Hank until General Bragg, hearing of Johnston's death, turned over the command at the center to General Ruggles and, repairing to the right, assumed command, and again ordered a forward movement. General Ruggles, haying noted the ineffectual efforts of Bragg to break the Union center, determined to concentrate artillery upon that point. He therefore assembled ten batteries and a section, sixty-two guns, and placed them in position along the west side of the Duncan field and southeastof the Review field. In support of these batteries he brought up portions of the brigades of Gibson, Shaver, Wood, Ander- son, and Stewart with the Thirtieth Tennessee and Crescent regiment of Pond's brigade, and once more attacked the position so stubbornly held by AVallace and Prentiss. The concentrated fire of these sixty-two guns drove away the Union batteries, but was not able to rout the infantry from its sheltered position in the old road. William Preston Johnston, in the Life of General Albert Sidney Johnston, gives this graphic description of the fighting at this point: This portion of the Federal line was occupied by Wallace's division and by the remnants of Prentiss's division. Here behind a dense thicket on the crest of a hill was p. »sted a str< >ng force of as hardy troops as ever fought, almost perfectly protected by the conformation of the ground. To assail it an open field had to be passed, enfiladed by the fire of its batteries. It was nicknamed by the Confederates by that very mild metaphor, "The Hornets' Nest." No figure of speech would be too strong to express the deadly peril of an assault upon this natural fortress whose inaccessible barriers blazed for six hours with sheets of flame and whose infernal gates poured forth a murderous storm of shot and shell and musketry fire which no living thing could quell or even withstand. Brigade after brigade was led againstit, butvalor was of no avail. Hindman'a brilliant brigades which had swept everything before them from the field were shivered into fragments and paralyzed for the remainder of the day. Stewart's regiments made fruitless assaults, 1 mt only to retire mangled from the field. Bragg now ordered up Gibson's splendid brigade; it made a charge, but like the others recoiled and fell back. Bragg sent orders to charge again. * * * Four times the position was charged. Four times the assault proved unavailing, the brigade was repulsed. About half past 3 o'clock the struggle which had been going on for five hours with fitful violence was renewed with the utm< >st fury. Polk's and Bragg's corps, intermingled, were engaged in a death grapple with the sturdy commands of Wallace and Prentiss. * * * General Buggies judiciously collected all the artil- lery lie could find, some eleven batteries, which he massed against the position. The opening of so heavy a fire and the simultaneous advance of the whole Confederate line resulted first in confusion and then in defeat of Wallace and the surrender of Prentiss at about half past 5 o'clock. Each Confederate commander of division, brigade, and regiment, as his command pounced upon the prey, believed it entitled to the credit of the capture. Breckinbridge, Ruggles, Withers, Cheatham, and other divisions which helped to subdue these stubborn fighters each imagined his own the hardest part of the work. Generals Polk and Hardee, with the commingled commands of the Confederate left, had followed McClernand in his retreat across Tilgh- man Creek and about 4 o'clock Hardee sent Pond with three of his regiments and Wharton's cavalry to attack the Union position upon the east side of this creek. In~ this attack the Confederates were repulsed with heavy loss, the Eighteenth Louisiana alone losing 42 per cent of those engaged. Pond retired to the west side of the creek and took no further part in the action of Sunday. Trabue and Rus- sell, with some other detachments, renewed the attack, and at 4.30 ]). m. succeeded in driving McClernand and Veatch back to the Ham- burg road, then wheeled to the right against the exposed Hank of W. II. L. Wallace's division. At the same time Bragg had forced back the Union left until Mc Arthur and Hurlbut, seeing that they were in L9 danger of being cut off from the Landing, withdrew their forces, letting the whole of Bragg's forces upon the rear of Prentiss and Wallace, while Polk and Hardee were attacking them on their right flank and Ruggles was pounding them from the front. Wallace attempted to withdraw by the left flank, but in passing the lines, closing behind him, he was mortally wounded. Colonel Tuttle with two of his regi- ments succeeded in passing the lines while four of Wallace's regiments with the part of Prentiss's division were completely surrounded, and, after an ineffectual effort to force their way back to the Landing, were compelled to surrender at 5.30 p. m. The number of prisoners cap- tured here and in previous engagements was 2,254 men and officers, about an equal number from each division. General Prentiss and the mortally wounded General Wallace were both taken prisoners, but General Wallace was left on the field and was recovered by his friends next day, and died at Savannah, Tenn., four days later. During the afternoon, Colonel Webster, chief of artillery, on Gen- eral Grant's staff, had placed Madison's battery of siege guns in posi- tion about a quarter of a mile out from the Landing, and then, as the other batteries came back from the front, placed them in position to the right and left of the siege guns. Hurlbut's division as it came back was formed on the right of these guns; Stuart's brigade on the left; parts of Wallace's division and detached regiments formed in the rear and to the right of Hurlbut, connecting with McClernand's left. McClernand extended the line to Hamburg and Savannah road and along that road to near McArthur's headquarters, where Buck- land's brigade of Sherman's division, with three regiments of McAr- thur's brigade, were holding the right which covered the bridge by which Gen. Lew. Wallace was to arrive on the field. About 5 o'clock Ammen's brigade of Nelson's division of the Army of the Ohio reached the field, the Thirty-sixth Indiana taking posi- tion near the left in support of Stone's battery. Two gunboats, the 7}/Ar and Lexington, were at the mouth of Dill Branch, just above the Landing. After the capture of Prentiss an attempt was made to reorganize the Confederate forces for an attack upon the Union line in position near the Landing. Generals Chalmers and Jackson and Colonel Trabue moved their commands to the right down the ridge south of Dill Branch until they came under fire of the Union batteries and gunboats, which silenced Gage's battery, the only one with the command. Trabue sheltered his command on the south side of the ridge, while Chalmers and Jackson moved into the valley of Dill Branch and pressed skir- mishers forward to the brow of the hill on the north side of the valley, but their exhausted men, many of them without ammunition, could not be urged to a charge upon the batteries before them. Colonel Deas, commanding a remnant of Gladden's brigade, formed with 224 men in the ravine on Jackson's left, and Anderson formed at the head of the ravine, where he remained ten or fifteen minutes, then he retired beyond range of the floating guns. Colonel Lindsay, First Mississippi Cavalry, charged upon and captured Ross's batteiy, as it was with- drawing from position near Hurlbut's headquarters, and then with 30 or 40 men crossed the head of Dill Branch and attempted to charge another battery, but finding himself in the presence of an infantry force . "• managed to get back under the hill without damage." This cavalry and the skirmishers from Chalmers' and Jackson's brigades 20 were the only Confederate troops thai came under musketry fire :i t'tei- the Prentiss and Wallace surrender. In the meantime General Bragg made an effort to get troops into position on the left of Pittsburg road, but before arrangements were completed night came <>n and General Beauregard ordered all the troops withdrawn. The Confederate troops sought bivouacs on' the field, some occupying captured Onion camps and some returning to their bivouac of Saturday night. General Beauregard remained near Shiloh Church. General Polk retired to his Saturday night camp. General Bragg was with Beauregard near the church, occupying General Sherman's headquarters camp. General Hardee and General Withers encamped with Colonel Martin in Peabody's camp. Trabue occu- pied camps of the Sixth Iowa and Forth-sixth Ohio. Pond's brigade alone of the infantry troops remained in line of battle confronting the Union line. The Union troops bivouacked on their line of battle, extending from Pittsburg Landing to Snake Creek bridge, where the Third Division arrived after dark, occupying the line from McArthur's headquarters to the lowlands of the creek. Thirteen hours the battle had raged over all parts of the field without a moment's cessation. The Union Army had been steadily forced back on both flanks. The camps of all but the Second Division had been captured, and position after position surrendered after the most persistent lighting and with great loss of life on both sides. Many regiments, and brigades even, of both armies had been shattered and had lost their organization. Detach- ments of soldiers and parts of companies and regiments were scattered over the field, some doubtless seeking in vain for their commands; many caring for dead and wounded comrades; others exhausted with the long conflict and content to seek rest and refreshment at any place that promised relief from the terrors of the battle. The fierce- ness of the fighting on Sunday is shown by the losses sustained by some of the organizations engaged. The Ninth Illinois lost 366 out of 617. The Sixth Mississippi lost 300 out of 125. Cleburne's brigade lost 1,013 out of 2,700, and the brigade was otherwise depleted until he had but 800 men in line Sunday night. He continued in the fight on Monday until he had only 58 men in line, and these he sent to the rear for ammunition. Gladden's brigade was reduced to 221. The Fifty-fifth Illinois lost 275 out of 657. The Twenty-eighth Illinois lost 215 out of 612. The Sixth Iowa had 52 killed outright. The Third Iowa lost 33 per cent of those engaged. The Twelfth Iowa lost in killed, wounded, and prisoners 98 per cent of the present for duty. Only 10 returned to camp, and they were stretcher bearers. These are but samples; many other regiments lost in about the same proportion. The loss of officers was especially heavy; out of 5 Union division commanders 1 was killed, 1 wounded, and 1 "captured; out of 15 brigade commanders 9 were on the list of casualties, and out of 61 infantry regimental commanders on the field 33 were killed, wounded, or missing, making a loss on Sun- day of 15 out of 81 commanders of divisions, brigades, and regiments. The Confederate Army lost its commander in chief, killed; 2 corps commanders wounded; 3 out of 5 of its division commanders wounded; 1 of its brigade commanders killed or wounded, and 20 out of 78 of its regimental commanders killed or wounded. With such losses, the constant shifting of positions, and the length of time engaged, it is not 21 a matter to cause surprise that the Confederate Army was reduced, as General Beauregard claims, to less than 20,000 men in line, and that these were so exhausted that they sought their bivouacs with little regard to battle lines, and that both armies lay down in the rain to sleep as best they could with very little thought, by either, of any danger of attack during the night. We find at Shiloh that with three exceptions no breastworks were prepared by either side on Sunday night. Of these exceptions a Union battery near the Landing was protected by a few sscks of corn piled up in front of the guns; some Confederate regiment ai ranged the fallen timber in front of Marsh's brigade camp into a sort of defensive work that served a good purpose the next day; and Lieutenant Nis- pel. Company E, Second Illinois Light Artillery, dug a trench in front of his guns, making a slight earthwork, which may yet be seen, just at the rig-ht of the position occupied by the siege guns. He alone of all the officers on the field thought to use the spade, which was so soon to become an important weapon of war. During Sunday night the remainder of General Nelson's division and General Crittenden's division of the Army of the Ohio arrived upon the field, and early Monday morning the Union forces were put in motion to renew the battle. General Crittenden's right rested on the Corinth road, General Nelson, to his left, extending the line across Hamburg road. About 1,000 men " from the Army of the Tennessee, extended the line to the overflowed land of the Tennessee. Two bri- gades of General McCook's arriving on the field about 8 o'clock formed on Crittenden's right, Rousseau's brigade in front line and Kirk's in reserve. At McCook's right was Hurlbut, then McClernand, then Sherman, then Lew. Wallaee, whose right rested on the swamps of Owl Creek. The Army of the Ohio formed with one regiment of each brigade in reserve, and with Bojde's brigade of Crittenden's division as reserve for the whole. The remnant of W. H. L. Wallace's division, under command of Colonel Tuttle, was also in reserve behind General Crittenden. The early and determined advance of the Union Army soon con- vinced General Beauregard that fresh troops had arrived. He, how- ever, made his disposition as rapidly as possible to meet the advance by sending General Hardee to his right, General Bragg to his left, General Polk to left center, and General Breckinridge to right center with orders to each to put the Confederate troops into line of battle without regard to their original organizations. These officers hurried their staff officers to all parts of the field and soon formed a line. Hardee had Chalmers on the right in Stuart's camps; next to him was Colonel Wheeler in command of Jackson's old brigade; then Col. Pres- ton Smith with remnants of B. R. Johnson's brigade; Colonel Maney with Stephens's brigade. Then came Stewart, Cleburne, Statham, and Martin under Breckinridge. Trabue, across the main Corinth road, just west of Duncan's, with Anderson and Gibson to his left under Polk. Then Wood, Russell, and Pond under Bragg, finishing the line to Owl Creek. Very few brigades were intact, the different regiments were hurried into line from their bivouaeks and placed under the command of the nearest brigade officer, and were then detached and sent from one part of the field to another as they were needed to «10 W. R., 295 and 338 (Colonel < trose says loth Illinois, but must be in error. 22 reenforce threatened points, until it is Impossible to follow movements or determine just where *-: i< -1 1 regiment was engaged. Monday's battle opened by the advance of Gen. Lew. Wallace's division on the Union right, attacking Pond's brigade in Hare's brigade camp, and was continued on that Hank by a left wheel of Wallace, extending his right until he had gained the Confederate left flank. Nelson's division commenced his advance at daylight and soon developed the Confederate line of battle behind the peach orchard. He then waited for Crittenden and McCook to get into position, and then commenced the attack upon Hardee, in which he was soon joined by all the troops on the field. The fighting seems to have been most stubborn in the center, where Hazen, Crittenden, and McCook were contending with the forces under Polk and Breckinridge upon the same ground where W. H. L. Wallace and Prentiss fought on Sunday. The 20,000 fresh troops in the Union Army made 1 the contest an unequal one, and though stubbornly contested for a time, at about 2 o'clock General Beauregard ordered the withdrawal of his army. To secure the withdrawal he placed Colonel Looney, of the Thirty-eighth Tennessee with his regiment, augmented by detachments from other regiments, at Shiloh Church, directed him to charge the Union center. In this charge Colonel Looney passed Sherman's headquarters and pressed the Union line back to the Purdy road; at the same time Gen- eral Beauregard sent batteries across Shiloh Branch and placed them in battery on the high ground beyond. With these arrangements, Beauregard, at -t o'clock, safely crossed Shiloh Branch with his army and placed his rear guard under Breckinridge in line upon the ground occupied by his army on Saturday night. The Confederate Army retired leisurely to Corinth, while the Union Army returned to the camps that it had occupied before the battle. General Beauregard, in his Century "war-book" article, page 6-t, in speaking of "The second days fighting at Shiloh," says: Our widely scattered force?, which it had been impossible to organize in the night after the late hour at which they were drawn out of action, were gathered in hand for tbe exigency as quickly as possible. Generals Bragg, Hardee, and Breckinridge hurried to their assigned positions — Hardee now to the extreme right, where were Chalmers' and Jackson's brigade of Bragg's corps; General Bragg to the left, where were assembled fragments of his own troops, as also of Clark's division, Polk's corps, with Trabue's brigade; Breckinridge was on the left of Hardee. This left a space to be occupied by General Polk, who, during the night, had gone with Cheatham's division back nearly to Hardee's posi- tion on the night of April 5. But just at the critical time, to my great pleasure, General Polk came upon the field with that essential division. By 7 o'clock the night before all of Nelson's division had been thrown across the Tennessee, and during the night had been put in position between Grant's discour- aged forces and our own. * * * After exchanging some shots with Forrest's cavalry, Nelson's division was confronted with a composite force embracing Chalmer's brigade, Moore's Texas regiment, with other parts of Withers's division; also the Cres- cent regiment of New Orleans and the Twenty-sixth Alabama, supported by well- posted batteries, and so stoutly was Nelson received that his division had to recede somewhat. Advancing again," however, about 8 o'clock, now reenforced by Hazen' 8 brigade, it was our turn to retire with the loss of a battery. But rallying and taking the offensive, somewhat reenforced, the Confederates were able to recover their lost ground and guns inflicting a sharp loss on Hazen's brigade, that narrowly escaped capture. Ammen's brigade was also seriously pressed and must have been turned but for the opportune arrival of Terrill's regular battery of McCook's division. In the meantime Crittenden's division became involved in the battle, but was suc- cessfully kept at bay for several hours by the forces under Hardee and Breckinridge, until it was reenforced by two brigades of McCook's division, which had been added to the attacking force on the field after the battle had been joined. * * * By 1 o'clock General Bragg's forces on our left, necessarily weakened by the 23 withdrawal of a part of his troops to reinforce onr right and center, had become so seriously pressed that lie had called for aid. Some remnants of Louisiana, Alabama, and Tennessee regiments were gathered up and sent to support him as best they might, and I went with them personally. General Bragg now taking the offensive, pressed his adversary back. This was about 2 o'clock. My headquarters were still at Shiloh Church. The odds of fresh troops alone were now too great to justify the prolongation of the conflict. So, directing Adjutant-General Jordan to select at once a proper position in our near rear, and there establish a covering force including artillery, I dispatched my staff with orders to the several corps commanders to prepare to retire from the field, first making a show, however, at different points of resuming the offensive. These orders were executed, I may say, with no small skill, and the Confederate army began to retire at 2.30 p. m. without apparently the least per- ception on the part of the enemy that such a movement was going on. The losses of the two days' battle are summed uj) as follows: Killed. Wounded. Missing. Total. 1,472 41 6,350 251 2, 826 4 10,648 296 1,513 241 0, (101 1,807 2,830 55 10, 944 2, 103 1,754 1,728 8,408 1 2,885 8,012 959 13,047 10, 699 3, 482 10,420 3. 844 23 746 This gives a Confederate loss of 24^ per cent of those present for duty, and a loss in the five divisions of Grant's army present for duty Sunday of 26f per cent. It is impossible to give losses of each day separately except as to general officers and regimental commanders. These are reported by name, and it is found that casualties among the officers of these grades are as follows: In the five divisions of Grant's army, loss on Sunday 45 In the same divisions, loss on Monday 2 In Lew. Wallace's division, loss on Monday In the Army of the Ohio, loss on Monday 3 Total loss general officers and regimental commanders, Sunday and Mon- day .... 50 In Confederate Army, casualties to officers of like grade, on Sunday were 30 In Confederate Army, Monday 14 Total loss of general officers and regimental commanders, Confederate Army 44 No general pursuit of the Confederates was made. The orders of General Halleck forbade pursuit," so the Confederates were allowed to retire to Corinth while the Union Army occupied itself in burying the dead and caring for the wounded until General Halleck arrived, and assuming command, inaugurated the "advance upon Corinth," in which the most conspicuous and leading part was played by the spade. In answer to an inquiry made by the Secretary of War, General Halleck said: 6 The newspaper accounts that our divisions were surprised are utterly false. Every division had notice of the enemy's approach hours before the battle commenced. Later, in transmitting a map to the Secretary, he said: 6 The impression, which at one time seemed to have been received by the Depart- ment, that our forces were surprised in the morning of the 6th, is entirely erroneous. I am satisfied from a patient and careful inquiry and investigation that all our troops were notified of the enemy's approach some time before the battle commenced. «11 War Records, pp. 97, 104. ''10 War Records, p. 99. 24 Organization qftJu Union Army at the battle of Shiloh, Te?m., April 6-7, 1862. ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. Maj. Gen. U. S. Grant, Commanding. FIRST DIVISION. Maj. Gen. John A. McClernand. First Brigade. Col. Abraham M. Hare/' 11th Iowa. Col. Marcellus M. Crocker, 13th Iowa. sth Illinois: Capt, James M. Ashmore." (apt. William II. Harvey.'' Capt. Robert H. Sturgess. 18th Illinois: Maj. Samuel Eaton. a Capt. Daniel H. Brush." Capt. William J. Dillon.'' Capt. Jabez J. Anderson. 11th Iowa, Lieut. Col. William Hall." I3th Iowa, Col. Marcellus M. Crocker. Second Brigade. Col. C. Carroll Marsh, 20th Illinois. 11th Illinois: Lieut. Col. Thomas E. G. Ransom. « Maj. Garrett Nevins." Capt. Lloyd D. Waddell. Maj. Garrett Nevins. 20th Illinois: Lieut. Col. Evan Richards. « Capt. Orton Frisbie. 45th Illinois, Col. John E. Smith. 48th Illinois: Col. Isham N. Haynie." Maj. Manning Mayfield. Third Bngade. Col. Julius Raith, c 43d Illinois. Lieut. Col. Enos P. Wood, 17th Illinois. 17th Illinois: Lieut. Col. Enos P. Wood. Maj. Francis M. Smith. 29th Illinois, Lieut. Col. Charles M. Ferrell. 43d Illinois, Lieut. Col. Adolph Engelmann. 49th Illinois, Lieut. Col. Phineas Pease. « Unattached. Dresser's Batterv (D), 2d Illinois Light Artillery, Capt, James P. Timonv. McAllister's Battery (D), 1st Illinois Light Artillery, Capt. Edward McAllister. « Schwartz's Battery (E), 2d Illinois Light Artillery, 'Lieut. George L. Nispel. Burrows' Battery, 14th Ohio Light Artillery, Capt. Jerome B. Burrows.« 1st Battalion, 4th Illinois Cavalry, Lieut. Col. William McCullough. Carmichael's Company Illinois Cavalry, Capt. Eagleton Carmichael. Stewart's Company Illinois Cavalry, Lieut. Ezra King. "Wounded. & Killed. c Mortally wounded. 25 SECOND DIVISION. Brig. Gen. William H. L. Wallace." Col. James M. Tuttle, 2d Iowa. First Brigade. Col. James M. Tuttle. 2d Iowa, Lt. Col. James Baker. 7th Iowa, Lt. Col. James C. Parrott. 12th Iowa: Col. Joseph J. Woods. & Capt. Samuel R.Edgington. c 14th Iowa, Col. Wm. T. Shaw. ' Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. John McArthur/' Col. Thomas Morton, 81st Ohio, 9th Illinois, Col. August Mersv. 12th Illinois: Lieut. Col. Augustus L. Chetlain. Capt. James K. Hugunin. 13th Missouri, Col. Crafts J. Wright. 14th Missouri, Col. B. S. Compton. 81st Ohio, Col. Thomas Morton. Third Brigade. Col. Thomas W. Sweeny/' 52d Illinois. Col. Silas D. Baldwin, 57th Illinois. 8th Iowa, Col. James L. Geddes. h 7th Illinois, Maj. Richard Rowett. 50th Illinois, Col. Moses M. Bane.^ 52d Illinois: Maj. Henry Stark. Capt. Edwin A. Bo wen. 57th Illinois: Col. Silas D. Baldwin. Capt. Gustav A. Busse. 58th Illinois, Col. Wm. F. Lynch.'' Artillery. Willard's Battery (A), 1st Illinois Light Artillery, Lieut. Peter P. Wood. Maj. J. S. Cavender's Battalion Missouri Artillery: Richardson's Battery (D), 1st Missouri Light Artillery, Capt. Henry Richardson. Welker's Battery (H), 1st Missouri Light Artillery, Capt. Frederick Welker. Stone's Battery (K), 1st Missouri Light Artillery, Capt. George H. Stone. Cavalry. Company A, 2d Illinois Cavalry, Capt. John R. Hotaling. Company B, 2d Illinois Cavalry, Capt. Thomas J. Larison. Company C, 2d United States Cavalrv, 1 T - . T „, „„ r, n n Company I, 4th United States Cavalry, } Lieut James IW1L " Mortally wounded. b Wounded and captured. ('Captured. ''Wounded.' 26 THIRD DIVISION. Maj. Gen. Lew. Wallace. First Brigade. Col. Morgan L Smith, 8th Missouri. 11th Indiana, Col. George F. McGinnis. 24th Indiana, Col. Alvin P. Hovey. 8th Missouri, Lieut. Col. James Peckham. Second Brigade. Col. John M. Thayer, 1st Nebraska. 23d Indiana, Col. William L. Sanderson. 1st Nebraska, Lieut, Col. William I). McCord. 58th Ohio, Col. Valentine Bausenwein. 68th Ohio, Col. Samuel H. Steadiuan." Third Brigade. Col. Chaih.es Whittlesey, 20th Ohio. 20th Ohio, Lieut. Col. Manning F. Force. 56th Ohio, Col. Peter Kinney. « 76th Ohio, Col. Charles R. Woods. 78th Ohio, Col. Mortimer D. Leggett. Artillery. Thompson's Battery, 9th Indiana Light Artillery, Lieut. George R. Brown. Buel's Battery (I), 1st Missouri Light Artillery, Lieut. Charles H. Thurber. Cavalry. 3d Battalion, 11th Illinois Cavalry, Maj. James F. Johnson." 3d Battalion, 5th Ohio Cavalry, Maj. Charles S. Hayes." FOURTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Stephen A. HYrlbut. First Brigadi . Col. Nelson G. Williams,'' 3d Iowa. Col. Isaac C. Pugh, 41st Illinois. 28th Illinois, Col. Amory K. Johnson. 32d Illinois, Col. John Logan.'' 41st Illinois: Col. Isaac C. Pugh. Lieut. Col. Ansel Tupper. (/ Maj. John Warner. Capt. John H. Nale. 3d Iowa: Maj. William M. Stone, c Lieut. George W. Crosley. «Not engaged at Sliiloh; remained at Crumps Landing. ^Captured. ''Wounded. d Killed. 27 Second Brigade. Col. James C. Veatch, 25th Indiana. 14th Illinois, Col. Cyras Hall. 15th Illinois: Lieut. Col. Edward F. W. Ellis." Capt. Louis D. Kelley. Lieut. Col. William Cam, 14th Illinois. 46th Illinois: Col. John A. Davis. >> Lieut. Col. John J. Jones. 25th Indiana: Lieut. Col. William H. Morgan. b Maj. John W. Foster. Third Brigade. Brig. Gen. Jacob G. Lauman. 31st Indiana: Col. Charles Craft, & Lieut, Col. John Osborn. 44th Indiana, Col. Hugh B. Reed. 17th Kentucky, Col. John H. McHenrv, jr. 25th Kentucky: Lieut. Col. Benjamin H. Bristow. Maj. William B. Wall. & Capt. B. T. Underwood. Col. John H. McHenry, jr., 17th Kentucky. Artillery. Ross's Battery, 2d Michigan Light Artillery, Lieut. Cuthbert W. Laing. Mann's Battery (C), 1st Missouri Light Artillery, Lieut, Edward Brotzmann. Myers's Battery, 13th Ohio Light Artillery, Capt, John B. Myers. < 'avalry, 1st and 2d Battalions 5th Ohio Cavalry, Col. William H. II. Taylor. FIFTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. William T. Sherman.'' First Brigade. Col. John A. McDowell, <-' 6th Iowa. 40th Illinois: Col. Stephen G. Hicks. & Lieut. Col. James W. Boothe. 6th Iowa: Capt. John Williams. & Capt. Madison M. Walden. 46th Ohio, Col. Thomas Worthington. Second Brigade. Col. David Stuart, & 55th Illinois. Lieut, Col. Oscar Malmborg/' 55th Illinois. Col. T. Kilby Smith, 54th Ohio. 55th Illinois, Lieut, Col. Oscar Malmborg. 54th Ohio: Col. T. Kilby Smith. Lieut. Col. James A. Farden. 71st Ohio, Col. Rodney Mason. "Killed. ''Wounded. ^Disabled. (' Temporarily commanding. 28 Third Brigade. Col. Jesse Hildebrand, 77th Ohio. 53d Ohio: Col. Jesse J. Appier. Lieut. Col. Robert A. Fulton. 57th <>hio, Lieut. Col. Americus V. Rice. 77th Ohio: Lieut. Col. Wills De Hass. Maj. Benjamin 1>. Fearing. Fourth Brigade. Col. Ralph P. Bockland, 72d Ohio. 48th Ohio: Col. Peter J. Sullivan." Lieut. Col. Job R. Parker. 70th Ohio, Col. Joseph R. Cockerill. 72d Ohio: Lieut. Col. Herman Canfield. 6 Col. Ralph P. Buckland. Artillery. Maj. Ezra Taylor, Chief of Artillery. Taylor's Battery (B), 1st Illinois Light Artillery, Capt. Samuel E. Barrett. \Vaterhouse's Battery (E), 1st Illinois Light Artillery: Capt. Allen C. Waterhouse.« Lieut. Abial R. Abbott," Lieut. John A. Fitch. Morton Battery, 6th Indiana Light Artillery, Capt, Frederick Behr. '' ( 'avalry. 2d and 3d Battalions 4th Illinois Cavalry, Col. T. Lyle Dickey. Thielemann's two companies Illinois Cavalry, Capt. Christian Thieiemann. SIXTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Benjamin M. Prentiss.'' First Brigade. Col. Everett Peabody, '' 25th Missouri. 12th Michigan, Col. Francis Quinn. 21st Missouri: Col. David Moore." Lieut. Col. H. M. Woodyard. 25th Missouri, Lieut. Col. Robert T. Van Horn. 16th Wisconsin, Col. Benjamin Allen." Second Brigade. Col. Madison Miller, 6 lSth Missouri. 61st Illinois, Col. Jacob Fry. 18th Missouri, Lieut. Col. Isaac V. Pratt. <-' 18th Wisconsin, Col. James S. Alban.'' "Wounded. ''Killed. 'Captured. 29 Not Brigaded. 16th Iowa:« Col. Alexander Chambers. & Lieut. Col. Addison H. Sanders. 15th Iowa, « Col. Hugh T. Reid.& 23d Missouri :« Col. Jacob T. TindalL' Lieut. Col. Quin Morton. < Artillery. Hickenlooper's Battery, 5th Ohio Light Artillery, Capt. Andrew Hiekenlooper. Munch's Batterv, 1st Minnesota Light Artillery: Capt, Emif Munch. & Lieut. William Pfaender. ( avalry. 1st and I'd Battalions, 11th Illinois Cavalry, Col. Robert G. Ingersoll. / ^assigned Troops. 15th Michigan,/ Col. John M. Oliver. 14th Wisconsin// Col. David E. Wood. Battery H, 1st Illinois Light Artillery, Capt. Axel Silfversparre. Batter)'- 1, 1st Illinois Light Artillery, Capt. Edward Bouton. Battery B, 2d Illinois Artillery, siege guns, Capt. Relly Madison. Battery F, 2d Illinois Light Artillery, Capt. John W. Powell. b 8th Battery, Ohio Light Artillery, Capt. Louis Markgraf. ARMY OF THE OHIO. Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell, Commanding. SECOND DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Alexander McD. McCook. Fourth Brigade. Brig. Gen. Lovell H. Rousseau. 6th Indiana, Col. Thomas T. Crittenden. 5th Kentucky, Co!. Harvey M. Buckley. 1st Ohio, Col. Benjamin F. Smith. 1st Battalion, 15th United States, ('apt. Peter T. Swain. ) M ■ Trw u n H 1st Battalion, 16th United States, Capt. Edwin F. Townsend, [ t?;„° 1st Battalion, 19th United States, Maj. Stephen D. Carpenter, J iVin °- Fifth Brigade. Col. Edward N. Kirk,* 34th Illinois. 34th Illinois: Maj. Charles N. Levanwaj ■ .<< Capt. Hiram W. Bristol. 29th Indiana, Lieut. Col. David M. Dunn. 30th Indiana: Col. Sion S. Bass.'' Lieut. Col. Joseph B. Dodge. 77th Pennsylvania, Col. Frederick S. Stumbaugh. "loth and 16th Iowa were on right in an independent command. ''"Wounded. "Arrived on field about 9 o'clock April 6. '/Killed. « Captured. /Temporarily attached Monday to Fourth Brigade, Army of the Ohio. (/Temporarily attached Monday to Fourteenth Brigade, Army of the Ohio. h Mortally wounded. 30 Sixth Brigade. Col. William H. Gibson, 49th Ohio. 32d Indiana, Col. August Willich. 39th Indiana, Col. Thomas J. Harrison. 15th Ohio, Maj. William Wallace. 49th Ohio, Lieut. Col. Albert M. Blackman. Artillery. Terrill's Battery (II), 5th United States Artillery, ('apt. William R. Terrill. FOURTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. William Nelson. Tenth Brigade. Col. Jacob Ammen, 24th Ohio. 36th Indiana, Col. William Grose. 6th Ohio, Lieut. Col. Nicholas L. Anderson. 24th Ohio, Lieut. Col. Frederick C. Jones. Nineteenth Brigade. Col. William B. Hazen, 41st Ohio. 9th Indiana, Col. Gideon C. Moody. 6th Kentucky, Col. Walter C. Whitaker. 41st Ohio, Lieut. Col. George S. Mygatt. Twenty-second Brigade. Col. Sanders D. Bruce, 20th Kentucky. 1st Kentucky, Col. David A. Enyart. 2d Kentucky, Col. Thomas D. Sedgewick. 20th Kentucky, Lieut. Col. Charles S. Hanson. FIFTH DIVISION. Brig. < Jen. Thomas L. Crittenden. Eleventh Brigade. Brig. Gen. Jeremiah T. Boyle. 9th Kentucky, Col. Benjamin C. Glider. 13th Kentucky, Col. Edward H. Hobson. 19th Ohio, Col. Samuel Beatty. 59th Ohio, Col. James P. Fyffe. Fourteenth Brigade. Col. William Sooy Smith, l.">th Ohio. 11th Kentucky, Col. Pierce B. Hawkins. 26th Kentucky, Lieut. Col. Cicero Maxwell. 13th Ohio, Lieut. Col. Joseph G. Hawkins. Artillery. Bartlett's Battery (G), 1st Ohio Light Artillery, Capt. Joseph Bartlett, MendenhalPs batteries (H and M), 4th United States Artillery, Capt. John Men- denhall. 31 SIXTH DIVISION."! Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Wood. Twentieth Brigade. Brig. Gen. James A. Garfield. 13th Michigan, Col. Michael Shoemaker. 64th Ohio, Col. John Ferguson. 65th Ohio, Col. Charles G. Harker. Twenty-first Brigade. Col. Geokge D. Wagner, 15th Indiana. 15th Indiana, Lieut. Col. Gustavus A. Wood. 40th Indiana, Col. John W. Blake. 57th Indiana, Col. Cyrus C. Hines. 24th Kentucky, Col. Lewis B. Grigsby. Organization of the Confederate Army at the Battle of Shiloh, Tenn., April 6-7, 1862. ARMY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, b Gen. G. T. Beauregard. FIRST ARMY CORPS. Maj. Geu. Leonidas Polk. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Charles Clark. ( ' Brig. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart. First Brigade. Col. Robert M. Russell, 12th Tennessee. 11th Louisiana: Col. Samuel F. Marks. <' Lieut. Col. Robert H. Barrow. 12th Tennessee: Lieut. Col. Tvree H. Bell. Maj. Robert P. Caldwell. 13th Tennessee, Col. Alfred J. Vaughan, jr. 22d Tennessee, Col. Thomas J. Freeman. >' Tennessee Battery, Capt. Smith P. Bankhead. «This division arrived upon the field about 2 o'clock on Monday. Wagner's brigade reached the front and became engaged, the 57th Indiana losing 4 men wounded. & Killed. c Wounded. 32 Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart. L3th Arkansas: Lieut. Col. A. D. Grayson." Maj. James A. McNeely. 6 Col. James C. Tappan. 4th Tennessee: Col. Rufus P. Neely. Lieut, Col. Otho F. Strahl. 5th Tennessee, Lieut. Col. Calvin D. Yenable. 33d Tennessee, Col. Alexander W. Campbell. 6 Mississippi Battery, Capt. Thomas J. Stanford. SECOND DIVISION. Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham. 6 Hirst Brigade. Brig. Gen. Bushkod R. Johnson. 6 Col. Preston Smith, 154th Tennessee. 6 Blythe's Mississippi: Col. A. K. Blythe." Lieut. Col. David L. Herron." Maj. James Moore. 2d Tennessee, Col. J. Knox Walker. 15th Tennessee: Lieut, Col. Robert C. Tyler. 6 Maj. John F. Heam. 154th Tennessee (senior) : Col. Preston Smith. Lieut. Col. Marcus J. Wright, 6 Tennessee Batterv, Capt, Marshall T. Polk. 6 Second Brigade. Col. William H. Stephens, 6th Tennessee. Col. George Maney, 1st Tennessee. 7th Kentucky : Col. Charles Wickliffe. c Lieut, Col. William D. Lannom. 1st Tennessee (Battalion): Col. George Maney. Maj. Hume R. Feild. 6th Tennessee, Lieut. Col. Timothy P. Jones. 9th Tennessee, Col. Henry L. Douglass. Mississippi Battery, Capt. Melanctho* Smith. ( 'avalry. 1st Mississippi, Col. Andrew J. Lindsay. Mississippi and Alabama Battalion, Lieut, Col. Richard H. Brewer. Unattached. 47th Tennessee, Col. Munson R. Hill.'' "Killed. b Wounded. 'Mortally wounded. ''Arrived on field April 7. 33 SECOND ARMY CORPS. Maj. (ien. Braxton Bragg. Escort. Company Alabama Cavalry, Capt. Robert W. Smith. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Daniel Ruggles. First Brigade. Col. Randall L. Gibson, 13th Louisiana. 1st Arkansas, Col. James F. Fagan. 4th Louisiana: Col. Henry W. Allen. « Lieut. Col. Samuel E. Hunter. 13th Louisiana: Maj. Anatole P. Avegno. b Capt. Stephen O'Leary." Capt. Edgar M. Dubroca. 19th Louisiana: Col. Benjamin L. Hodge. Lieut. Col. James M. Hollingsworth. Vaiden, or Bain's, Mississippi Battery, Capt. S. C. Bain. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. Patton Anderson. 1st Florida Battalion: Maj. Thaddeus A. MeDonell." Capt. W. G. Poole. Capt, W. Capers Bird. 17th Louisiana, Lieut, Col. Charles Jones." 20th Louisiana, Col. August Reichard. Confederate Guards Response Battalion, Maj. Franklin H. Clack. 9th Texas, Col. Wright A. Stanley. Washington (Louisiana) Artillery, Fifth Company, Capt. W. Irving Hodgson. Third Brigade. Col. Preston Pond, jr., 16th Louisiana. 16th Louisiana, Maj. Daniel Gober. 18th Louisiana: Col. Alfred Mouton.« Lieut. Col. Alfred Roman. Crescent (Louisiana) Regiment, Col. Marshall J. Smith. Orleans Guard (Louisiana) Battalion, Maj. Leon Querouze.« 38th Tennessee, Col. Robert F. Looney. Ketchum's Alabama Battery, Capt, William II. Ketchum. Cavalry. Alabama Battalion (5 companies — Jenkins, Cox, Robins, Tomlinson, and Smith), Capt. Thomas F. Jenkins. <■' Wounded. b Mortally wounded. 605a— 03 3 84 SECOND DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Jones M. Withers. First Brigadt . Brig. Gen. Adley II. Gladden. « Col. Daniel W. Adams,'' 1st Louisiana. Col. Zach C. Deas,6 22d Alabama. 21st Alabama: Lieut. Col. Stewart W. Cayce. Maj. Frederick Stewart. 2lM Alabama: Col. Zach C. Deas. Lieut. Col. John C. Marrast. 25th Alabama: Col. John Q. Loomis. '' Maj. George D. Johnston. 26th Alabama: Lieut. Col. John G. Coltart.& Lieut. Col. William D. Chadick. 1st Louisiana: Col. Daniel W. Adams. Maj. Fred H. Farrar, jr. Robertson's, Alabama, Battery, Capt. Felix H. Robertson. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers. 5th Mississippi, Col. Albert E. Fant. 7th Mississippi, Lieut. Col. Hamilton Mayson. 9th Mississippi, Lieut. Col. William A. Rankin. n 10th Mississippi, Col. Robert A. Smith. 52d Tennessee, Col. Benjamin J. Lea. Gage's, Alabama, Battery, Capt. Charles P. Gage. Third Brigade. Brig. Gen. John K. Jackson. 17th Alabama, Lieut, Col. Robert C. Fariss. 18th Alabama, Col. Eli S. Shorter. 19th Alabama, Col. Joseph Wheeler. 2d Texas: Col. John C. Moore. Lieut. Col. William P. Rogers. Maj. Hal. G. Runnels. Girardey's, Georgia, Batter)', Capt. Isadore P. Girardey. Cavalry. Clanton's Alabama Regiment, Col. James H. Clanton. 6 a Mortally wounded. b Wounded. 35 THIRD ARMY CORPS. Maj. Gen. William J. Hardee. 8 First Brigade. Brig. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman. b ° Col. R. G. Shaver, 7th Arkansas. b 2d Arkansas: Col. Daniel C. Govan. Maj. Reuben F. Harvey. 6th Arkansas, Col. Alexander T. Hawthorn. 7th Arkansas: Lieut. Col. John M. Dean.' 7 Maj. James T. Martin. 3d Confederate, Col. John S. Marmaduke. Warren Light Artillery, or Swett's, Mississippi, Battery, Capt. Charles Swett. Pillow's Flying Artillery, or Miller's, Tennessee, Battery, Capt. Miller. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. Patrick R. Cleburne. 15th Arkansas, Lieut. Col. Archibald K. Patton.^ 6th Mississippi: Col. John J. Thornton." Capt. W. A. Harper. I'd Tennessee: Col. William B. Bate." Lieut. Col. David L. Goodall. 5th (35th) Tennessee, Col. Benjamin J. Hill. 23d Tennessee: Lieut. Col. James F. Neill." Maj. Robert Cantrell. 24th Tennessee, Lieut. Col. Thomas H. Peebles. (Shoup's Battalion.) Trigg's (Austin) Arkansas, Battery, Capt. John T. Trigg. Calvert's (Helena) Arkansas, Battery, Capt. J. H. Calvert. Hubbard's, Arkansas, Battery, Capt. George T. Hubbard. Third Brigade. Brig. Gen. Sterling A. M. Wood.'' Col. William K. Patterson, 8th Arkansas, temporarily. 16th Alabama, Lieut. Col. John W. Harris. 8th Arkansas, Col. William K. Patterson. 9th (14th) Arkansas (battalion) Maj. John H. Kelly. 3d Misssissippi Battalion, Maj. Aaron B. Hardcastle. 27th Tennessee: Col. Christopher H. Williams/' Maj. Samuel T. Love.^ 44th Tennessee, Col. Coleman A. McDaniel. 55th Tennessee, Col. James L. McKoin. Harper's (Jefferson Mississippi) Battery: Capt. William L. Harper. « Lieut. Put Darden. Georgia Dragoons, Capt. Isaac W. Avery. « Wounded. c Commanding his own and Third Brigade. b Disabled. d Killed. 36 RESERVE CORPS. Brig. Gen. John 0. Bbeckinbidge. First Brigade. Col. Robert 1'. Traboe, 4th Kentucky. (Clifton's) 4th Alabama Battalion, INIaj: James M. Clifton. 31st Alabama, Lieut, Col. Montgomery Gilbreath. 3d Kentucky, Lieut, Col. Benjamin Anderson." 4th Kentucky, Lieut, Col. Andrew R. IIynes.« 5th Kentucky, Col. Thomas. H. Hunt, 6th Kentucky, Col. Joseph H. Lewis. Crew's Tennessee Battalion, Lieut, Col. James M. Crews. Lyon's (Cobb's) Kentucky Battery, Capt. Robert Cobb. Byrne's Mississippi Battery, Capt. Edward P. Byrne. Morgan's Squadron, Kentucky Cavalry, Capt. John H. Morgan. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. John S. Bowen." Col. John D. Martin. 9th Arkansas. Col. Isaac L. Dunlop. 10th Arkansas, Col. Thomas. D. Merrick. 2d Confederate: Col. John D. Martin. Maj. Thomas H. Mangum. 1st Missouri, Col. Lucius L. Rich. Pettua Flying Artillery, or Hudson's Mississippi Battery, Capt, Alfred Hudson. Watson's, Louisiana, Battery, . Thompson's Company, Kentucky Cavalry, Capt, Phil. B. Thompson. Third Brigade. Col. Winfield S. Statham, 15th Mississippi. 15th Mississippi. 22d Mississippi. 19th Tennessee, Col. David H. Cummings. 20th Tennessee, Col. Joel A. Battle. '» 28th Tennessee. 45th Tennessee, Lieut, Col. Ephraim F. Lytle. Rutledge's, Tennessee, Battery, Capt. Arthur M. Rutledge. Forrest's Regiment Tennessee Cavalry, Col. Nathan B. Forrest, a Unattached. Wharton's Texas Regiment Cavalry, Col. John A. Wharton. « Wirt Adams's Mississippi Regiment Cavalry, Col. Wirt Adams. McClung's, Tennessee, Battery, Capt. Hugh L. W. McClung. Roberts Arkansas Battery. "Wounded. ''Captured. 37 Cwmmand'mg and staff officers. DEPARTMENT OF MISSISSIPPI. Maj. Gen. H. W. Halleck, commanding. Brig. Gen. Geo. W. Cullum, Chief of Staff. Capt. N. H. McLean, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. J. C. Kelton, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. P. M. Preston, assistant adjutant- general. Col. Richard D. Cutts, aid-de-camp. Capt. C. B. Throckmorton, aid-de-camp. Lieut. J. T. Price, aid-de-camp. Lieut. D. C. Wagner, aid-de-camp. Lieut. A. Backer, aid-de-camp. Brig. Gen. W. Scott Ketchum, Inspector- General. Brig. Gen. A. J. Smith, Chief of Cavalry. Col. J. V. D. Du Bois, Chief of Artillery. Col. George Thorn, Chief of Engineers. Lieut. Col. J. B. McPherson, assistant chief of engineers. Col. J. C. McKibhin, Judge-Advocate. Maj. Robert Allen, Chief Quartermaster. Maj. T. J. Haines, Chief Commissary of Subsistence. Surg. J. J. B. Wright, Medical Director. ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. Maj. Gen. U. S. Grant, commanding. Col. J. I). Webster, Chief of Staff. Capt. J. A. Rawlins, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. W. S. Hillyer, aid-de-camp. Capt. W. R. Rowley, aid-de-camp. Capt. C. B. Lagow, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Col. J. B. McPherson, Chief of Engineers. Lieut. W. L. B. Jenney, assistant chief of engineers. Lieut. Wm. Kossak, assistant chief of engineers. Capt. J. P. Hawkins, Chief Commissary of Subsistence. Surg. Henry S. Hewitt, Medical Director. Col. G. G. Pride, volunteer aid. FIKST DIVISION. Maj. Gen. John A. McClernand, com- manding. Maj. Adolph Schwartz," 2d Illinois Ar- tillery, chief of staff. Maj. M. Brayman, acting assistant adju- tant-general. Capt. Warren Stewart/' Illinois Cavalry, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Henry C. Freeman/' aid-de-camp. Lieut. Jos. E. Hitt, 4th Illinois Cavalry, aid-de-camp. Lieut. A. B. Hall, 4th Illinois Cavalry, aid-de-camp. Lieut. S. R. Tresilian, assistant engineer. Lieut. Erastus S. Jones, ordnance officer. First Brigade. Col. Abraham M. Hare/' 11th Iowa, commanding. Lieut, and Adjt. Cornelius Cadle, jr., 11th Iow r a, acting assistant adjutant-general. Lieut. Samuel Caldwell, 8th Illinois, vol- unteer aid. Second Brigade. Col. C. C. Marsh, 20th Illinois, com- manding. Lieut. E. P. Boas, acting assistant adju- tant-general. Adjt. J. E. Thompson, & 20th Illinois, aid-de-camp. Capt. G. W. Kennard, acting assistant quartermaster. Surg. Christopher Goodbrake, brigade surgeon. Third Brigade. Col. Julius Raith,* 43d Illinois, com- I Lieut. Abraham H. Ryan, acting assist- manding. ant adjutant-general. " Wounded. & Killed. 38 SECOND DIVISION. Brig. Gen. W. II. L. Wallace, com- manding. ('apt. Wm. McMichael, 6 assistant adju- tant-general. Capt. T. J. New ham, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Cyrus E. Dickey, aid-de-camp. Lieut, Guyton I. Davis, 11th Illinois, aid-de-camp. Lieut. I. 1'. Uunisev, Taylor's Battery, aid-de-camp. First Brigade. Col. .hums M. Tuttle, 2d Iowa, com- Lieut. .las. I'. Sample, 7th Iowa, acting manding. assistant adjutant-general. Second Brigade. ommand- Brig. Gen. John McArthur, ing. Lieut, Geo. L. Paddock, acting assistant adjutant-general. Lieut. George Mason, 12th Illinois, aid- tle-ranip. Third Brigade. Col. Thos. W. Sweeny, c 52d Illinois, commanding. Lieutenant and Adjutant Allen, 52d Illinois, acting assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. Wm. McCullough, 8th Iowa, aid- de-camp. THIRD DIVISION. Maj. Gen. Lewis Wallace, commanding. Capt, Frederick Knefler, assistant adju- tant-general. Lieut. John W. Ross, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Addison W. Ware, aid-de-camp. Capt. E. T. Wallace, 11th Indiana, aid- de-camp. First Brigade. Col. Morgan L. Smith, 8th Missouri, I Lieut. D. C. Coleman, acting assistant commanding. adjutant-general. Second Brigade. Col. John M. Thayer, 1st Nebraska, commanding. Lieut, 8. A. Strickland, acting assistant adjutant-general. Capt. Allen Blacker, aid-de-camp. Lieut. William S. Whittin, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Col. Robt. K. Scott, 68th Ohio, volunteer aid. Capt. Lewis Y. Richards, 68th Ohio, volunteer aid. Mr. Geo. E. Spencer, volunteer aid. Third Brigade. Col. Charles Whittlesey, 20th Ohio, com- I E. N. Owens, acting assistant adjutant- manding. general. FOURTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Stephen A. Hurlttut, com- manding. Capt. Smith D. Atkins, acting assistant ad j utant-general. Lieut. J. C. Long, 9th U. S. Infantry, aid-de-camp. Lieut M. K. Cook, aid-de-camp. First Brigade. Col. N. G. Williams, c 3d Iowa, com- I Lieut. F. Sessions, acting assistant adju- manding. tant-general. Capt. S. Simmons, acting commissary of subsistence. Lieut. D. J. Benner, assistant quarter- master. Surg. A. G. Keenan, medical director. Lieut. W. H. Dorchester, volunteer aid. "Killed. ''Captured. c Wounded. 39 Second Brigade, Col. James C. Veatch, 25th Indiana, commanding. Capt. F. W. Fox, 14th Illinois, acting assistant adjutant-general. Lieutenant' Brunner, 25th Indiana, aid-de-camp. Surg. John T. Walker, brigade surgeon. Third Brigade. Brig. Gen. Jacob G. Lauman, command- Lieut. T. N. Barnes, aid-de-camp. ing. Lieut. 11. Scofield, a acting assistant adjutant-general. FIFTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Win. T. Sherman,* 1 command- ing. Capt. J. II. Hammond, assistant adjutant- general. Maj. W. I>. Sanger, volunteer aid. Lieut. John Taylor, 5th Ohio, aid-de- camp. Lieut. W. D. Strong, assistant quarter- master. Lieut. J. C. McCoy, 54th Ohio, aid-de camp. Maj. Ezra Taylor, chief of artillery. Capt. C. A. Morton, 82(1 Illinois, acting commissary of subsistence. Surg. I). W. Hartshorn, medical director. Asst. Surg. Saml. L'Hommedieu, assist- ant medical director. Lieut. Win. Kossak, engineer. "First Brigade. Col. J. A. McDowell, 6th Iowa, com- manding. Lieut. Byron K. Cowles, 6th Eowa, acting assistant adjutant-general (absent). Capt. Willard II. Ilarland, 6th Iowa, aid-de-camp. Second Brigade. Col. David Stuart," 55th Illinois, com- Adjt. Charles Loomis, aid-de-camp. i nanding. Third Brigade. Col. Jesse Hildebrand, 77th Ohio, coin- I Lieut. S. S. Me. \aughton, acting assistant n landing. adjutant-general. Fourth Brigade. Col. Ralph P. Buckland, 72d Ohio, com- manding. Lieut. Eugene A. Rawson, 72d Ohio, act- ing assistant adjutant-general. John B. Rice, surgeon. Lieut. D. M. Darkness, 72d Ohio, <|iiar- tennaster. SIXTH DIVISION. Brig: Gen. Benj. M. Prentiss, b command- ing. ('apt. Henry Binmore, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. Edwin Moore, aid-de-can i p. Surg. S. \V. Everett, c division surgeon. First Brigade. Col. Everett Peabody," 25th Missouri, Capt. Geo. K. Donnelly, assistant adju- commanding. I tant-general. Second Brigade. Col. Madison Miller, lSth'' Missouri, commanding. a Wounded. '' Captured. 'Killed. 40 ARMY OF THE OHIO. Maj.Gen. Don Carlos Ilucl I, commanding. Capt. J. H. Gilman, 19th U. 8., Inspector Col. James B. Fry, Chief of Staff. Capt, J. J\I. Wright, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. A. F. Rockwell, aid-de-camp. Lieut. C. L. Fitzhugh, 4th U. S. Artillery, aid-de-camp. Lieut. T.J. Bush, 24th Kentucky, aid-de- camp. of Artillery. Capt. E. Cay, 16th U. 8., Inspector of Cavalry. Capt. H. C. Bankhead, 5th U. S., In- spector of Infantry. Capt, Nathaniel Michler, engineer. Surg. Robt, Murray, U. 8. A., Medical Director. SECOND DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Alex. McD. McCook, com- manding. Capt. Daniel McCook, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. 8. W. Davits, aid-de-camp. Lieut. W. T. Hoblitzell, aid-de-camp. Lieut. W. F. Straub, aid-de-camp. Capt. Orris Blake, provost-marshal. Capt. J. I). Williams, acting commissary of subsistence. Lieut, J. A. Campbell, ordnance officer. Surg. A. 1'. Meylert, medical director. Fourth Brigade. Brig. Gen. Lovell II. Rousseau, com- manding. Lieut, D. Armstrong, acting assistant ad- jutant-general. Lieut. David Q. Rousseau, aid-de-camp. Lieut, John D. Wickliffe, 2d Kentucky Cavalry, aid-de-camp. Capt, W. M. Carpenter, assistant quarter- master. Mr. E. F. Jewett, volunteer aid. Fifth Brigade. Col. Edward X. Kirk/' 34th Illinois, com- manding. Capt, S. T. Davis, 77th Pennsylvania, act- ing assistant adjutant-general. Capt, Abraham Beehler, 34th Illinois, aid-de-camp. Lieut, S. B. Dexter, .'!4th Illinois, aid-de- camp. Sixth Brigade. Col. W. II. Gibson, 49th Ohio, command- ing. Capt, Henry Clay, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut, Wm. C. Turner, aid-de-camp. Lieut, E. A. Otis, aid-de-camp. Surg. S. W. Gross, brigade surgeon. FOURTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. William Nelson, commanding. Capt, J. Mills Kendrick, U. S. Volunteers, assistant adjutant-general. Lieut. Wm. P. Anderson, 6th Ohio, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Richard Southgate, 6th Ohio, aid- de-camp. W. Preston Graves, volunteer aid. Horace N. Fisher, volunteer aid. Capt. J. G. Chandler, IT. S. Army, assist- ant quartermaster. Lieut. C. C. Peck, 6th Ohio, acting com- missary of subsistence. Lieut, Chas. C. Horton, 24th Ohio, ord- nance officer. Capt, and Asst. Surg. B. J. D. Irwin, 17. S. Army, medical director. Tenth Brigade. Col. Jacob Ammen, 24th Ohio, command- I Lieut, R. F. Wheeler, aid-de-camp, ing. I Nineteenth Brigade. Col. Wm. B. Hazen, 41st Ohio, com- manding. Lieut. Robt. L. Kimberly, acting assistant adjutant-general. Lieut. Chas. D. Gaylord, aid-de-camp. Lieut, Wm. M. Beebe, jr., aid-de-camp. " Wounded. 41 Twenty-set ■<»nl Brigade. Col. Sanders D. Bruce, 20th Kentucky, commanding. Lieut. S. T. Corn, acting assistant adju- tant-general. Lieut. Wickliffe Cooper, aid-de-camp. FIFTH DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Thos. L. Chittenden, com- manding. Capt. Lyne Starling, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. Louis M. Buford, aid-de-camp. Surg. Middleton Goldsmith, medical di- rector. Eleventh Brigade. Brig. Gen. J. T. Boyle, commanding. Capt. John Boyle, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. H. Q. Hughes, aid-de-camp. Lieut. H. T. Liggett, aid-de-camp. Lieut. John T. Farris, acting assistant quartermaster. Fourteenth Brigade. Col. Wm. Sooy Smith, 13th Ohio, com- manding. Lieut. Frank J. Jones, loth Ohio, acting assistant adjutant-general. Lieut. R. E. Hackett, 26th Kentucky, aid-de-camp. SIXTH DIVISION". Brig. Gen. Thos. J. Wood, commanding. Capt. Wm. H. Schlater, assistant adju- tant-general. Capt. Geo. W. Lennard, 36th Indiana, aid-de-can i p. Capt. Fred. A. Clark, 29th Indiana, aid- de-camp. Lieut. Col. Isaac Gass, 64th Ohio, in- spector-general. Lieut. Clark S. Gregg, 65th Ohio, acting commissary of subsistence. Lieut. Frank B. Hunt, 65th Ohio, ord- nance officer. Lieut. John C. Martin, 21st Ohio, signal officer. Surg. Francis B. Mussy, medical director. Twentieth Brigade. Brig. (Jen. James A. Garfield, commanding. Twenty-fir xt Brig< ide. Col. Geo. D. Wagner, 15th Indiana, commanding. CONFEDERATE ARMY. Gen. Alhert Sidney Johnston, « command- ing. Maj. Gen. Braxton Bragg, Chief of Stall. Capt. H. P. Brewster, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. N. Wickliffe, assistant adjutant-gen- eral. Lieut. George Baylor, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Thomas M. Jack, aid-de-camp. Governor Isham G. Harris, volunteer aid. Col. Wm. Preston, volunteer aid. Maj. D. M. Hayden, volunteer aid. Dr. E. W. Munford, volunteer aid. Calhoun Benham, volunteer aid. Capt. Theodore O'Hara, assistant in- spector-general. Maj. Albert J. Smith, assistant quarter- master. Capt. W. L. Wickham, assistant quarter- master. Col. J. F. Gilmer, ! > Chief Engineer. Surg. D. W. Yandell, Medical Director. « Killed. '' Wounded. 12 Gen, G. T Beauregard, Becond in command, commanding, Monday. Col. Thomas Jordan, assistant adjutant Col, R B, Lee, Chief of Subsistence. general. Capt Clifton 1 1. Smith, assistant adjutant- Lieut John w. Otey, assistant adjutant general. general. Col, Jacob Thompson, volunteer aid. Lieut Col. S. W. Ferguson, aid-de-camp. Maj. Numa Augustine, volunteer aid. Lieut v. K. Chisolm, aid-de-cainp. Maj. H. 1'. Peyton, volunteer aid. Brig. Gen. James Trudeau, volunteer aid. Capt Albert Ferry, volunteer aid.. Capt. W, W. Porter, volunteer aid. rapt. B. B. Waddell, volunteer aid. Maj. Geo. W. Brent assistant inspector Capt E, 11. Cummins, Signal Officer. general. FIRST CORPS, Maj. lion. Leonidas Polk, commanding. Maj. Geo. Williamson, « assistantadjutant general. Lieut W. B, Richmond, aid-de-camp Lieut A. 11. Polk, aid-de-camp. Lieut. P. B. Spence, aid-de-camp. Lieut. J«>hn Rawle, aid-de-camp. Lieut John s. Lanier, aid-de-camp, Lieut VV. M. Porter, volunteer aid. Lieut Col, E. IX Blake, assistant in- spector-general. Maj. Smith P. Bankhead, Chief of Artil- lery. Capt J. T. Champneys^ Chief of Ord- nance. Maj. Thomas rotors, assistant quarter- master. Surg. W. D. Lyles. Medical Director. first division. Brig. Gen. Charles Clark," commanding. Maj. Howell Hinds, assistant adjutant- Capt W. H. McCardle, assistantadjutant- | general, Army of Potomac, volunteer general. ;>i ( l- Lieut. Wm. Yerger, jr., aid-de-camp. Maj. W. M. Inge, assistant adjutant- Mai. W. 11. llaynos. acting commissary of subsistence general, Arm\ of Potomac, volunteer wd. James E. McClure, assistant quarter rapt. John A. Buckner, 8tli Kentucky, master. volunteer aid. First Brigade, Col. R M. Russell, 12th Tennessee, commanding. Si ' Brigade. Brig, ^on. A. P. Stewart commanding. Lieut N. Green, jr.. aid-de-camp. Capt Thomas W. Preston, assistant Col. W. B. Boss, volunteer aid. adjutant-general. Mr. Joseph 1*. doss, volunteer aid. SECOND nivisioN Maj. cion. B, F. Cheatham,* command- A. 1.. Robertson, aid-de-camp. ing. John Campbell, * aid-de-camp, Maj. James D. Porter, assistant adjutant- Judge Archibald Wright volunteer aid. general. Col. Edward Pickett jr., -1st Tennessee, Capt F. H, McNairy, aid-de-camp. volunteer aid. Tapt. T, F. Henry, aid-de-camp. Tapt. Win. Roundtree, volunteer aid. First Brigade. Brig. Gen. B. R. Johnson. « commanding. Capt IV 1.. Moore, volunteer aid, Maj. G. c;. Rogers, assistant adjutant- Tapt. John 11. Anderson," 10th Ten- general, nessee, volunteer aid, Capt Wm. T. Blaketnore, aid-de-camp, S oond Brigade. Co\. Wm. 11. Stephens, 6th Tennessee, Wm. D. Stephens," aid-de-camp. commanding. Thos, A. Henderson," aid-de-camp, Lieut Isaac M. Jackson, < assistant adju- rapt. A. 1.. Swingley, volunteer aid. tant-general. Wounded. ft Killed. Mortally wounded. 43 SECOND AKMY CORPS. Maj. Gen. Braxton Bragg, commanding. Maj. George < <. < lamer, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. II. W. Walter, assistant adjutant general. Capt. G. B. Cooke, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. Towson Ellis, aid-de-camp. Lieut. F. S. Parker, aid-de-camp. Lieut. Col. F. Gardner, C. S. Army, assistant- inspector-general. Lieut. Col. W. K. I'.eanl," Florida Vol- unteers, assistant inspector-general. Capt. S. II. Lockett, chief engineer. Maj.. I. II. Hallonquist, Chief of Artillery. Capt. W. ( ). Williams, assistant chief of artillery. Capt. 11. Oladowski, Chief of Ordnance. Maj. .1. .1. Walker, Chief of Subsistence. Maj. L. F. Johnston, ( 'hief Quartermaster. Maj. O. P. Chaffee, assistant quarter- master. Surg. A. .1. Foard, Medical Director. Surg. .T. C. Nott, Medical Inspector. Lieut. < !ol. David Urquhart, volunteeraid. FIRST DIVISION. Brig. Gen. Daniel Ruggles, commanding. Capt. Roy M. Hooe, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. M. B. Ruggles, aid-de-camp. Maj. E. S. Ruggles, « volunteer aid. ( 'apt. < i. M. Beck, volunteer aid. Col. S. S. Heard, 17th Louisiana, volun- teer aid. Maj. .1. II. Hallonquist, chief of artillery. Maj. John Claiborne, chief quarter- master. Lieut. L. D. Sandidge, assistant inspector- general. Surg. 1'". M. Hereford," medical director. Dr. S. s. Sandidge, volunteer surgeon. IPirst Brigade. Col. Randall L. Gibson, I3tb Louisiana, commanding. Lieut. Benjamin King, & aid-de-eamp. Lieut. II. II. Bein, acting assistant adju- tant-general. Mr. Robert Pugh, aid-de-camp. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. Patton Anderson, command- Capt. William < i. Barth, assistant, adju- tant-general. Lieut. Win. M. Davidson, aid-de-camp, Lieut. John W. .lames, 5th Georgia, aid- de-camp. ('apt. Henry I). Bulkley, acting commis- sary of subsistence. Capt. John T. Sibley, assistant quarter- master. Surg. C. T>. Gamble, medical director. Lieut. Wm. McR. .Ionian," 1st, Florida, aid-de-camp. 'I'll in I Brigade. Col. Preston Pond, jr., coinniandin Lieut. 0. 0. Cobb, assistant adjutant- general. SECOND DIVISION'. Brig. Gen. .1 ss M. Withers, command ing. Capt. I>. E. Huger, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. I ). F. Withers, aid-de-camp. Lieut. B. M. Thomas, assistant inspector- general. R. W. Withers, volunteer aid. S. P.. Howe, volunteeraid. Win. Williamson, volunteeraid. L. E. Smith, volunteer aid. First Brigade. Brig. ( Sen. A. 1 1. < Hadden, •' commanding. Maj. C. I). Anderson, acting assistant ad- jutant-general. Adjt. Adolph Kent, 1st Louisiana, aid-de- camp. Adjt. John Stout, 25th Alabama, aid-de- camp. Adjt. Elias F. Travis, 22d Alabama, aid- de-camp. Sergt. Maj. Nott, 22d Alabama, aid- de-camp. " Wounded. ''Killed. c Mortally wounded. 44 Second Brigade Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers, com- manding. ('apt. Henry Craft, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. Geo. T. Banks, aid-de-camp. Lieut. W. T. Stricklin, 3d Mississippi, assistant inspector-general. Capt. R. S. Crump, acting commissary of subsistence. Lieut. M. M. Shelley, volunteer aid. Mr. James Barr, volunteer aid. Third Brigade. Brig. Gen. John K. Jackson, command- I Capt. J. B. Cummings, assistant adjutant- ing. general. THIRD ARMY CORPS. Maj. Gen.Wm. J. Hardee," commanding. Maj. \V. 1). Pickett, assistant adjutant- general. Lieut. John R. B. Burt well, aid-de- camp. Lieut. Thomas W. Hunt, aid-de-camp. Capt. William Clare," aid-de-camp. Lieut. Wilson, aid-de-camp. Capt. A. W. Clarkson, aid-de-camp. Maj. F. A. Shoup, Chief of Artillery. Lieut. Wm. Kearney, assistant inspector- general. Maj. L. 0. Bridewell, Chief Quarter- master. Maj. W. E. Moore, Chief Commissary. Surg. G. W. Lawrence, Medical Di- rector. Col. S. II. Perkins, volunteer aid. First Brigade. Col. R. G. Shaver, 7th Arkansas, commanding. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. P. R. Cleburne, commanding. Maj. J. K. Dixon, assistant adjutant and inspector-general. Th ird Brigade. Brig. Gen. S. A. M. Wood," command- ing. Lieut. Linus A. McClung, assistant adju- tant-general. Lieut. H. C. Wood, aid-de-camp. Capt. Wm. Clare," volunteer aid. Capt. Joshua Sledge," volunteer aid. ("apt. J. II. Coleman, volunteer aid. Mr. Frank Foster, volunteer aid. Lieut. S. Church, acting commissary of subsistence. RESERVE CORPS. Brig, Gen. John C. Breckinridge, commanding. First Brigade. Col. Robt. P. Trahue, 4th Kentucky, commanding. Joseph L. Robertson, assistant adjutant- general. Capt. Samuel Gray, volunteer aid. John Hooe, volunteer aid. Thomas B. Darragh, volunteer aid. Robt. W. McKee, volunteer aid. Charlton Morgan," volunteer aid. Charles J. Maston, volunteer aid. Second Brigade. Brig. Gen. John S. Bowen," commanding. Third Brigade. Col. Winfield S. Statham, 15th Mississippi, commanding. " Wounded. 45 DETAILED MOVEMENTS OF ORGANIZATIONS. THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. On the 6th day of April, 1862, the Army of the Tennessee was encamped on the west bank of the Tennessee River; the First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Divisions at Pittsburg Landing, with 39,830 officers and men present for duty; the Third Division at Crump's Landing-, with 7,564 officers and men present for duty. General Grant's headquarters was at Savannah, Tenn., where he was awaiting the arrival of General Buell. While at breakfast early Sunday morning, April 6, General Grant heard heavy tiring at Pitts- burg Landing, and leaving orders for General Nelson to move his division up the east bank of the river to Pittsburg, General Grant and staff repaired to the battlefield, where he arrived at about 8* a. m. He visited each of his divisions at the front, and finding that the attack was by a large force of the enemj", he sent an order for his Third Division to hasten to the field and a request to General Buell for reenforcements. The Army of the Tennessee was gradually driven back until at sunset it occupied a position extending from the Landing to Snake Creek Bridge. In this position it repulsed an attack made by the Confederates at 6 o'clock p. m. General Grant passed the night in bivouac with his troops, without shelter, and early next morning, reenforced b}^ his Third Division and by General Buell with three divisions of the Army of the Ohio, he renewed the battle, and at 4 p. m. had regained possession of the entire field. FIRST DIVISION. (McClernand's.) This division, composed of three brigades of infantry, four batteries of artillery, one battalion and two companies of cavalry, was ordered from Savannah to Pittsburg March 20, 1862, and went into camp across the main Corinth road about one-half mile east of Shiloh Church. On Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, the division formed for battle with its Third Brigade thrown forward to support Sherman's left; its First and Second Brigades along the Corinth road; McAllister's battery at the northwest corner of the Review field; Burrows's battery at center of second brigade; Dresser's battery at Water Oaks Pond; Schwartz's battery, first to Sherman's right, then at the crossroads. The division was attacked at about 9 a. m. and was driven from its position along the Corinth road at about 11 a. m. with the loss of Burrows's battery, one gun of McAllister's battery, and one gun of Schwartz's battery. It made its next stand at right angles to the center of its Second-Brigade camp, where Dresser's battery lost four guns. The division then retired to its fourth line, in the camp of its First Brigade, where it rallied and in a countercharge drove the Confederates back and recovered the whole of the camp of the Second Brigade and McCler- nand's headquarters, and captured Cobb's Kentucky battery at 12 m. It held this advance but a short time, when it was driven slowly back until at 2 p. m. it was again in the field of its First-Brigade camp, where it held its fifth line until 2.30 p. m. It then retired across Tilghman Creek to its sixth line, at "Cavalry Field," where at 4.30 p. m. it 46 repulsed a charge made by Pond's brigade and Wharton's cavalry, and then retired to the Hamburg and Savannah road, where, with its left thrown back, it bivouacked Sunday night. It advanced Monday morning over the same ground where it fought on Sunday, and at 4 p. m. reoccupied its camps on the field. > First Brigade. (Hare's.) This brigade of four regiments, forming the right of the First Divi- sion, was encaimped in Jones Field. It moved from its camp at about 8 a. m. April 6, 1S62, by the left flank and formed in line of battle on the ridge between the Review field and the Corinth road, its left in edge of Duncan Field, in the following order from left to right: Eighth Illinois, Eighteenth Illinois, Thirteenth Iowa. The Eleventh Iowa, detached from the brigade, formed still farther to the right, supporting Dresser's battery at the Water Oaks Pond. In this position the three left regiments were attacked about 10 a. m. by Shaver's brigade of Hardee's corps, and at 11 a. m. were driven back across the Corinth road, the left behind the north side of Duncan Field. This position was held until McClernand advanced and recov- ered his camp at noon. These regiments then retired with the division, the Thirteenth Iowa participating in the repulse of Wharton's cavalry on sixth line at 4.30. Here Colonel Hare was wounded, and Col. M. M. Crocker, Thirteenth Iowa, took command of the brigade and conducted the three regiments to bivouac near the Fourteenth Iowa camp. The Eleventh Iowa, in support of Dresser's battery, fell back to the third and fourth lines with its division, and in the rally and recovery of camps it captured a standard from the enemy, and in conjunction with the Eleventh and Twentieth Illinois captured Cobb's battery. The regi- ment then fell back and at night was, still supporting the two remaining guns of Dresser's battery, in position at the left of the siege guns. On Monday this brigade was attached to Tuttle's command, which served as reserve for General Crittenden's division, Army of the Ohio, until about 3 p. m., when it was ordered to the front and charged the enemy southwest of Review field, the Eighth and Eighteenth Illinois each capturing one gun from the enemy. Second Brigade. (Marsh's.) This brigade of four regiments was encamped, with its left in Woolf Field, in the following order of regiments from left to right: Forty- fifth Illinois, Forty-eighth Illinois, Twentieth Illinois, Eleventh Illi- nois. It formed line of battle on its parade ground Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, and at about 8 a. m. moved out, first to the front, but immediately afterwards to the left, and formed along the Corinth road, its left at the northwest corner of the Review field, its right near the crossroads, Burrows's battery at the center. In this position the brigad3 was fiercely attacked by Wood's bri- gade of Hardee's corps and Stewart's brigade of Polk's corps. It with- stood the attack from about 10 a. in. to 11 a. m., when it fell back about 700 yards and re-formed at right angles to the center of its camp. It held this position for a short time and then fell back to Jones Field, where it rallied and in conjunction with other troops recaptured its 47 camp at about noon. In this advance the Twentieth and Eleventh Illinois, assisted by the Eleventh Iowa, captured Cobb's Confederate battery. The brigade retained possession of parts of its camp for about two hours, retiring slowly to Jones Field, where it was engaged until 2.30 p. m., when it fell back to Hamburg and Savannah road, where its three left regiments united with the Third Brigade and bivouacked Sunday night, just south of McArthur's headquarters. The Eleventh Illinois, reduced to a captain and 80 men, bivouacked near the siege guns, and was in reserve on Monday. The Twentieth, Forty- fifth, and Forty-eighth formed a part of Marsh's command on Mon- day and advanced nearly west, recovering their camDS at about 3 p. m. Third Brigade. (Raith's.) This brigade of four regiments was camped along the Hamburg and Purdy road, its right near the left of the Second Brigade, in the fol- lowing order from left to right: Forty-ninth Illinois, Forty-third Illinois, Twenty-ninth Illinois, Seventeenth Illinois. Colonel Rearden, senior officer present, being sick, Colonel Raith was informed, after his regiment was in line of battle, that he was to command the brigade. Under orders from division commander, he moved the right of his brigade forward to Shiloh Church to the sup- port of Sherman's left. In this position the brigade was attacked about a. m. April 6, 1862, on its left flank by Wood and Stewart and in front by Russell and Johnson, and was driven slowly back to the crossroads, where it joined the right of the Second Brigade. Here the Seventeenth and Forty-third, while supporting Schwartz's battery, were subjected to a crossfire of artillery and lost heavily. Colonel Raith was mortally wounded. The Foiiy-third was surrounded and cut its way out, losing 43 men killed, that were buried in one trench near the crossroads. Lieutenant Colonel Wood, who succeeded to the command of the brigade, did not hold his brigade intact. The Seven- teenth and Forty-third rallied at McClernand's third line and again at his fourth position, where they were joined by the Forty-ninth. The Seventeenth and Forty-ninth then retired to Hamburg and Savannah road. The Forty-third was engaged in the advance and retaking of the camp at noon, and then joined the Seventeenth and Forty-ninth at Hamburg and Savannah road, where the three regiments were engaged at 4.30 p. m., and bivouacked Sunday night. On Monday these regi- ments joined Marsh's command and served with him until the enemy retired from the field. The Twenty-ninth was engaged at Cavalry Field in resisting Pond's attack at 4.30 p. m., after which it retired to siege guns, where it remained Sunday night and Monday. McAllis- ter's battery lost one gun at northwest corner of review field, and was afterwards engaged in McClernand's fifth and sixth positions, and at the landing at 6 p. m., and on Monday, with Marsh's brigade. SECOND DIVISION. (W. H. L. Wallace's.) This division, composed of three brigades of infantry, four batteries of artillery, and four companies of cavalry, was commanded by Brig. Gen. C. F. Smith until April 2, 1862, when, on account of Smith's disability, Brig. Gen. W. H. L. Wallace was assigned to the command. 48 The division arrived at Pittsburg Landing March is and established its camp near the river between the Corinth road and Snake Creek. It formed at 8 a. in. Sunday morning, April Oth, when the First and Second Brigades and three batteries were eonducted by Wallace to a position on Corinth road just east of Duncan Field, where Turtle's brigade was formed south of the road, and two regiments of Sweeny's brigade on north side of the road. The other regiments of Sweeny's brigade were held in reserve for a time and then distributed to differ- ent parts of the held. McArthur's brigade was detached from the division and served on other parts of the field. Batteries D, H, and K, First Missouri Light Artillery, were placed on a ridge behind Tuttle's brigade. In this position Wallace was attacked at about 9.30 a. m. by Shaver's brigade, assisted by artillery located in the Review field. At 10.30 a. m. the attack was renewed by Shaver, Stephens, and Stewart, followed at noon by four determined attacks by Gibson's brigade. General Ruggles then took charge of the Confederate forces in front of Wallace and assembled ten batteries and two sections of artillery on the west side of Duncan Field, and sent Wood, Anderson, Stewart, and Cleburne to reenforce Shaver in a renewed attack upon Wallace's front. At the same time the Union forces on Wallace's right and left retired, allowing the enemy to gain his flanks and rear. Seeing that he was being surrounded, Wallace sent his batteries to the rear and then attempted to move his infantry out by the flank along the Pittsburg road. While riding at the head of his troops and near the fork of the Eastern Corinth road he received a mortal wound and was left for dead upon the field. When that part of the field was recovered on Monday General Wallace was found to be alive. He was taken to Savannah, where he died on the 10th. Four regiments of the division did not receive orders to retire in time to save them- selves and were surrounded and captured at 5.30 p. m. The remainder of the division, under the command of Colonel Tuttle, retired to the right of the siege guns where the troops remained in line Sunday night. On Monday the infantry commanded by Tuttle acted as reserve to Crittenden's division of the Army of the Ohio, until about noon, when it advanced to front line on Crittenden's right and participated in all the after battles of the day. Battery A, First Illinois Light Artillery, served with McArthur's brigade on Sunday and had three guns in action with Sherman on Monda} r . The three Missouri batteries, when they retired from Wal- lace's line at 5 p. m., reported to Colonel Webster near the Landing and were put in line, where they assisted in repelling the last Confed- erate attack on Sunday. They were not engaged on Monday. First Brigade. (Tuttle's.) This brigade of four regiments was encamped near the river north of the Corinth road. It moved to the front Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, by the Eastern Corinth road. When near southeast corner of Duncan field, Colonel Tuttle, riding at the head of his brigade, dis- covered the enemy in the woods beyond the field. He at once turned the head of his brigade to the right and threw his regiments into line in an old road behind Duncan Field in the following order from left 49 to right: Fourteenth Iowa, Twelfth Iowa, Seventh Iowa, Second Iowa. The right reaching to the Corinth road, the left extending one regiment beyond, or south of, Eastern Corinth road; the three right regiments behind a field; the left regiment behind a dense thicket. About 9.30 a. m. Confederate batteries opened tire upon the brigade. This was soon followed by infantry attack coming through the thick brush on the left. At about 10.30 a. m. Stephens's brigade made an attack through the field. He was repulsed when he reached the middle of the field. This was closely followed by a second attack by Stephens, assisted by General Stewart, commanding Hindman's division. About noon Gibson's brigade was sent against Tuttle's position, and made four determined but unsuccessful charges lasting until after 2 p. m., when it withdrew and Shaver made his third attack, in which Lieutenant Colonel Dean of the Seventh Arkan- sas was killed within a few yards of the front of the Fourteenth Iowa. General Ruggles then assembled sixty -two pieces of artillery on west side of Duncan Field and concentrated their tire upon Tuttle and the batteries in his rear. At the same time Ruggles sent Wood, Ander- son, and Stewart to reenforce Shaver in a renewed attack at the front. While meeting this attack Tuttle was ordered at 5 p. m. to withdraw his brigade. He gave personal direction to the Second and Seventh Iowa and with them retired to the right of Hurlbut's division, near the siege guns, where he assumed command of the remnant of the Second Division and formed his line near the camp of the Fourteenth Iowa. The staff officer sent by Tuttle to order the Twelfth and Four- teenth Iowa to fall back directed the commanding officers of those regiments to "about face and fall back slowly." Marching by the rear rank about 200 yards, these regiments encountered Confederate troops across their line of retreat. These they engaged and forced back to the camp of Hurlbut's First Brigade, where the Confederates were reenforced and the two regiments, together with two from the Third Brigade, and a part of Prentiss' division were surrounded and captured at 5.30 p. m. The Fourteenth Iowa surrendered to the Ninth Mississippi of Chalmers' brigade, which had occupied the extreme right of the Confederate army. The Twelfth Iowa surren- dered to Colonel Looney, of the Thirtj'-eighth Tennessee, Pond's bri- gade, from the extreme left of the Confederate Army. The Second and Seventh Iowa were with Tuttle's command on Mon- day in reserve to General Crittenden. During the day the Second Iowa was sent to reenforce Nelson's left and in a charge across a field defeated an attempt of the enemy to turn the left of the Army of the Ohio. Later the Seventh Iowa charged a battery in Crittenden's front. Second Brigade. (McArthur's.) This brigade, composed of five regiments, the Ninth and Twelfth Illinois, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Missouri, and the Eighty-first Ohio, was encamped on Hamburg and Savannah road near Snake Creek. The first order to the brigade Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, disunited its regiments and sent them to different parts of the field, and they were not united again until after the battle was over. The Thirteenth Missouri went to Sherman; the Fourteenth Mis- souri and Eighty-first Ohio to guard Snake Creek bridge. General 605a— 03 1 50 McArthur, with the Ninth and Twelfth Illinois and Willafd's battery, moved directly south along the Hamburg road to the support of Col- onel Stuart. Finding that Stuart had moved to the left rear of his camps, McArthur formed his command to Stuart's right rear just east of the Peach Orchard, the Ninth Illinois on the rightnextto Hamburg road; the Twelfth Illinois to its left; Willard's battery in rear of the Ninth. In this position McArthur sustained himself against Jackson's brigade until about 2 p. m., when Bowen from Reserve Corps was sent to reenforce Jackson. Under this combined attack McArthur was compelled to fall back. The Ninth Illinois, having- lost 58 per cent of men engaged, retired to camp for ammunition and repairs. It was again engaged near its camp at 4.30 p. m., and then joined Tuttle's com- mand at the Fourteenth Iowa camp, and served with him on Monday. The Twelfth Illinois fell back to a second position where it joined the Fiftieth and Fifty-seventh Illinois and was engaged until about 4 p. m., when it retired to its camp and passed the night. On Monday it was engaged with McClernand's command. The Fourteenth Missouri was engaged Sunday in a skirmish with Brewer's cavalry on the right of Union line. On Monday it joined the Third Division and supported Thompson's battery. The Eighty-first Ohio remained on guard at Snake Creek bridge until 3 p. m. It then moved south to Hurlbut's headquarters, where it was engaged in the 4.30 conflict on Hamburg road. It bivouacked on McClernand's left Sunday night and served with Marsh's command on Monday. The Thirteenth Missouri joined McDowell's brigade on Sunday and was engaged with it in the conflict with Trabue at noon. It bivouacked Sunday night near Ninth Illinois camp and joined Sherman on Monday. General McArthur was wounded on Sunday and was succeeded in command by Colonel Morton, of the Eighty-tirst Ohio. Third Brigade. (Sweeny's.) This brigade was composed of Eighth Iowa and the Seventh, Fif- tieth, Fifty -second, Fifty-seventh, and Fifty-eighth Illinois. It was encamped between the First and Second brigades and followed the First Brigade Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, on the Corinth road to the Eastern Corinth road, where it halted in reserve. The Fifty-eighth and Seventh Illinois were at once moved forward to Duncan Field, where they formed at 9.30 a. m., on north side of the Corinth road, prolonging Tuttle's line and connecting with McClernand's left. Soon after, the Fiftieth Illinois was detached and sent to the left, where it became engaged on McArthur's left. It fell hack with the Twelfth Illinois to position east of the Bloody Pond, where it was joined at about 3 p. m. by the Fifty-seventh Illinois. These regiments held their position on left of the army until 4 p. m., when they fell back and supported Stone's battery near the Landing in the last action of the day. About noon the Eighth Iowa was put in line between Tuttle and Prentiss, where it supported Hickenlooper's battery until 5 p. m. The Fifty-second Illinois was sent, about 3 p. m., to the right. As it was moving down Tilghman Creek it ran into Wharton's cavahw, which was moving up the creek. A few volleys were exchanged by head of column, then the Fifty-second moved to the camp of the Fifteenth Illi- nois and was there engaged in repelling Pond's 4.30 p. m. attack. It 51 then retired to the siege guns. The Seventh and Fifty-eighth Illinois, on Tuttle's right, and the Eighth Iowa, on his left, participated in all the engagements described in the account of Tuttle's brigade ^until 4 p. m., when the Seventh retired to McClernand\s seventh line. The Eighth Iowa and the Fifty-eighth Illinois were surrounded and cap- tured at the same time that Prentiss was captured. Colonel Sweeny was wounded on Sunday and was succeeded on Monday b} r Colonel Baldwin, Fifty-seventh Illinois. THIRD DIVISION. (Lew. Wallace's.) This division, composed of three brigades of infantry, two batteries of artillery, and two battalions of cavalry, was encamped north of Snake Creek; the First Brigade at Crump's Landing; the Second Brig- ade at Stoiry Lonesome; the Third Brigade at Adamsville. Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, hearing sounds of battle up the river, General Wallace ordered his command to concentrate at Stony Lonesome, where at 11.30 a. m., he received orders from General Grant, directing him to join the right of the army then engaged on the south side of Snake Creek. At 12 m., leaving two regiments and one gun to guard the public property at Crump's Landing, General Wallace started with his First and Second Brigades for the battlefield by the Shunpike road, which led to the right of Sherman's division as formed for battle in the morning. At about 2.30 p. m. a staff officer from General Grant overtook Gen- eral Wallace on this road and turned him back to the river road, by which the Third Brigade having fallen into column, his division reached the battlefield after the action of Sunday was over. The division bivouacked in line of battle, facing west along the Savannah road north of McArthur's headquarters; the First Brigade on the left, with Thompson's battery on its right; the Second Brigade in the center; the Third Brigade on the right, with Thurber's battery at its center. At daylight Monday morning, April T, 1862, the batteries of the division engaged and dislodged Ketchum's Confederate battery, posted in the camp of the Eighth Illinois. At 6.30 a. m., the division, its right on Owl Creek, advanced en echelon of brigades, left in front, crossed Tilghman Creek, and drove the Confederates from their position at Oglesby's headquai'ters. Then wheeling to the left against the left flank of the enemy, it advanced righting, until at 4 p. m. it had pushed the Confederates through the Union camps and beyond Shiloh Branch. Near nightfall the division retired under orders to General Sherman's camps, where it bivouacked Monday night. First Brigade. (Smith's.) This brigade was encamped at Crump's Landing. It moved out 2^ miles on Purdy road to Stony Lonesome and joined the Second Brig- ade early Sunday morning, April 6, 1862. At 12 m., it started for Shiloh by a road leading southwesterly toward the right of Sherman's camps. At about 2.30 p. m. the brigade was counter marched to the Adamsville and Pittsburg road by which it reached the battlefield about 52 dark and bivouacked in front of the camp of the Fourteenth Missouri. On Monday the brigade formed in Perry Field, near McArthur's head- quarters; the Twenty-fourth Indiana on the left, the Eleventh Indiana on the "Tight, and the Eighth Missouri in reserve. At about 6.30 a. m. it advanced across Tilghman Creek and at 8 a. m. entered the field of Hare's brigade camp. It crossed said field in a southwesterly direction, driving back the Confederate forces, thence through the Cresent Field and to McDowell's brigade camp, where it bivouacked Monday night. Losses during the day, 18 killed and 114 wounded. The Twenty-fourth Indiana lost its lieutenant colonel, 1 captain, and 1 lieutenant killed. Second Brigade. (Thayer's.) This brigade, consisting of Twenty-third Indiana, First Nebraska, Fifty-eighth Ohio, and Sixty-eighth Ohio was encamped at Stony Lonesome, 2£ miles from the Tennessee River, on the Purdy road. The Sixty-eighth Ohio was detailed to guard the baggage, the other regiments of the brigade followed the First Brigade in its march toward Shiloh April 6, 1862. It countermarched, from a point 4i miles out, to the Adamsville and Pittsburg road, and thence via river road to the battlefield, where it arrived after dark and bivouacked, in line of battle, at the right of the First Brigade. Monday morning it formed en echelon in right rear of the First Brigade, the First Nebraska on the left, the Twenty-third Indiana on the right, and the Fifty-eighth Ohio in reserve. It followed the movements of the First Brigade through the day and bivouacked at night in the camp of the Forty- sixth Ohio. Third Brigadi . (Whittlesey's.) This brigade of four Ohio regiments, to wit. the Twentieth, Fifty- sixth, Seventy-sixth, and Seventy-eighth, was encamped at Adams ville, 1 miles from Crumps. It formed in line early Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, when tiring was heard at Shiloh, with all its camp equi- page on wagons, and remained in line until 2 p. m., when orders were received to join the other brigades en route for Shiloh. It marched on direct road toward Pittsburg, falling in behind the other brigades as they came back into that road from the countermarch. At about 4 p. m. the Fifty-sixth was detached and ordered to go with baggage to Crumps Landing. The other regiments arrived on the battlefield after dark and bivouacked in front of the camp of the Eighty- first Ohio. Monday morning the brigade formed the extreme right of Union line, its right, the Seventy-sixth, on the swamps of Owl Creek, the Seventy-eighth on the left in rear of the right of the Second Brigade, the Twentieth in reserve, until it crossed Tilghman Creek, when it took position on the right. Retaining this formation the brigade advanced, swinging to the left until 11 a. m., when it was transferred to left of the division in support of Stuart's brigade of Sherman's division. The Seventy-sixth remained on the left, the other regiments soon returned to the right, the Twentieth in front line, the Seventy-eighth in reserve. The last engagement by this 53 brigade was between the Twentieth Ohio, in the field near McDowell's headquarters, and Confederates at camp of Forty-sixth Ohio. The brigade bivouacked in camp of Sixth Iowa Monday night. FOURTH DIVISION. (Hurlbut's.) This division, composed of three brigades of infantry, three batteries of artillery, and two battalions of cavalry, arrived at Pittsburg Land- ing on boats March 10, 1802. On the 18th. it disembarked and estab- lished its camps about 1 mile from the river, near the point where the Hamburg and Savannah road crosses the road from Pittsburg to Corinth. The division was formed about 8 a. m., Sunday morning, April 6, 1802, and soon after the Second Brigade was sent to reenforce General McClernand. The First and Third Brigades, with the artillery, moved out to the support of Prentiss's division, but finding that Prentiss was falling back, Hurlbut put his division in line at the Peach Orchard field, the First Brigade on the south side, the Third Brigade on the west side, the batteries in the field. In this position he was attacked by Chalmers's and Gladden's brigades, which were following Prentiss's division, and by Robertson's, Harper's, and Girardey's batteries, which were stationed in Prentiss's camps. A shell from one of these bat- teries blew up a caisson belonging to M} T ers's Thirteenth Ohio Battery; the men stampeded, abandoning their guns, and were not again in action at Shiloh. Mann's battery fought with the division all day, and again on Mon- day. Ross's battery did excellent service until ordered to fall back at 4 p. m., and was preparing to retire to the Landing when it was charged b} r Lindsay's Mississippi cavalry and captured. Only two guns were saved. Hurlbut held his position on two sides of the Peach Orchard until about 1.30 p. m., when he was attacked by Breckinridge's corps. Finding that Stuart was falling back on the left, Hurlbut retired to the north side of the field with his First Brigade, and transferred his Third Brigade from the right to the left flank. Here he maintained himself until 3 p. m., when he was again obliged to retire to the left of his camps. About 1 p. m. he found that his left was again being turned and fell back to the siege guns and re-formed. The Second Brigade rejoined the division and all participated in the final action of the day. The division bivouacked in line of battle in front of the siege guns, and on Monday the First and Second Brigades and Mann's battery formed on McClernand's left; the Third Brigade reported to Sherman. All were engaged until the Confederates retired from the field. First Brigade. (Williams's.) This brigade of four regiments was encamped across the Corinth road, li miles from the river. On Sunday morning, April 0, 1802, at about 8 o'clock, it moved out on the Hamburg road and formed line of battle along the south side of the Peach Orchard field in following 54 order from left to right: Forty-first Illinois, Twenty-eighth Illinois,' Thirty-second Illinois, Third Iowa. In this position it was attacked by skirmishers from Chalmers's brigade and by artillery fire, by which Colonel Williams was disabled and the command of the brigade passed to Colonel Pugh, Forty-first Illinois. Chalmers's brigade was with- drawn and Colonel Pngh retired his brigade to the center of the field, where he was attacked at about 1.30 p. m. by Statham's and Stephen's brigades, and at 2.30 was driven back to the north side of the field. The Thirty-second Illinois was transferred to the left of the brigade east of Hamburg road, and lost its Lieutenant Colonel Boss, killed. As the left of the line was driven back, Colonel Pugh again fell back to the Wicker Field, where he held his line until -i p. m., when the bri- gade retired, under II urlbut's orders, to position near siege guns, where it remained in line Sunday night. The Third Iowa, occupying the right of Hurlbut's line, connected with Prentiss and remained until about 5 p. m., then retired through its camp and along Pittsburg road just before the Confederates closed their line behind Prentiss. Major Stone, commanding the regiment, was captured; other casualties of the day among the officers left the regiment in command of Lieutenant Crosley. He joined his command to the Thirteenth Iowa in the last action of the day, and then reported to his brigade commander. He commanded the regiment, in action with his brigade, the next day. On Monday the brigade formed on McClernand's left and was engaged until noon. Second Brigade. (Veatch'*.) This brigade, of four regiments, was encamped across the Hamburg and Savannah road, north of the Corinth road. It was sent April 6, 1862, to reenforce McClernand, and moved out along the Corinth road and formed in line behind Marsh's brigade at about 9 a. m. in the fol- lowing order from left to right: Twenty-fifth Indiana, Fourteenth Illinois, Fortv-sixth Illinois, Fifteenth Illinois. It became engaged at about 10.30 a. m., and at 11 a. m. was compelled to retire. The Twenty- fifth Indiana and Fourteenth Illinois fell back 200 yards, changing front to rear on left companies, aird formed along the road that runs from review field past McClernand's headquarters. A little later they retired to the right of Hare's brigade, where they held their position until after noon, when they fell back to McClernand's sixth line, where they were engaged in Pond's repulse at 4.30 a. in., after which they joined Hurlbut in his last position on Sunday. The Fifteenth Illinois lost all its field officers and several captains at first position and retired at 11 a. m. to the Jones Field, where it was joined by the Forty-sixth Illinois in supporting Barrett's battery. These two regiments joined McDowell's left in the advance at 12 m. and continued in line until 1 p. m., when they retired — the Fifteenth Illinois to join Hurlbut, the Forty-sixth Illinois to its camp for dinner; later the Forty sixth joined Marsh's command on the Hamburg road and assisted in the final action of the day and was with Marsh's command on Mon- day. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Illinois and Twenty-fifth Indiana, under Colonel Veatch, formed the left of the Arni} r of the Tennessee on Monda} r and joined McCook's right until about 11 a. m., when they crossed the Corinth road near Duncan's and were engaged in Review field and in front line until 1 p. m. 55 Third Brigade. (Lau man's. ) This brigade had formerly belonged to the Army of the Ohio, where it was known as Craft's brigade. It was sent from that army to reen force Grant at Fort Donelson and had remained with the Army of the Tennessee. General Lauman was assigned to the command April 5, 18(52. Its camp was on the south side of Dill Branch, its right at the Hamburg road. About 8 a. m. Sunday April 6, 1862, it moved out to the west side of the Peach Orchard field and formed line with its right in the woods near the head of Tilghman Creek. The order of its regiments from left to right was: Seventeenth Kentucky, Twenty- fifth Kentuck} T , Forty-fourth Indiana, Thirty-first Indiana. About 9 a. m. it was attacked through the timber on its right by Gladden's brigade, closely followed in succession by attacks, upon its whole line, by Stephens's brigade and the right of Gibson's brigade. One of the features of the battle at this place was the burning of the leaves and brush in the woods where the wounded were lying. About 2 p. m. the brigade was transferred to the left and formed in open woods just east of the Hamburg road, the Thirty-first Indiana in reserve on left flank. This position was held until about 1 p. m., when the brigade retired with its division to the seige guns. After the action for the day had closed it moved 150 yards to front and bivouacked for the night. On Monday at 10 a m. it reported to Sherman and served with him until close of the battle. FIFTH DIVISION. (Sherman's. ) This division, of four brigades of infantry, three batteries of artillery, two battalions, and two independent companies of cavalry, was organized at Paducah about the 1st of March, 1862. It went up the Tennessee River to the mouth of Yellow Creek, and returned to Pittsburg March 16, disembarked, and marched out to Monterey, returned to Pittsburg, and established its camps on the 19th along the Hamburg and Purely road, its center at Shiloh Church. On Sunday morning, April 6, 1862, the division formed in front of its camps where its Third and Fourth Brigades became engaged at 7.30 a. m. These brigades, reenforced by Raith's brigade of the First Division, held the line until 10 a. m., when Sherman attempted to fall back to thePurdy road. In this movement his Third and Fourth Brigades became disorganized and retired to Hamburg and Savannah road, only parts of regiments remaining in line. McDowell's brigade, when ordered at 10 a. m. to fall back, became engaged in Crescent field and afterwards on McClernand's right until about 2 p. m. Stuart's brigade was engaged with Chalmers on the extreme left until 2 p. m. Barrett's battery formed in front of Shiloh Church and opened fire at 7.30 a. m.; then at 10 a. m. retired to Jones Field, where it was engaged until 2 p. m., when it retired to the river. Waterhouse's bat- tery went into action at 7 a. m. with two guns at Rhea House; these soon retired to main battery 150 yards in rear, where the full battery remained in action until 10 a. m., when it was outflanked arnd lost three guns. The remainder of the battery retired disabled from the field. 56 Behr's battery was with McDowell's brigade, one gun guarding the bridge at Owl Creek. When Sherman ordered McDowell to join hi.s other brigades nearShiloh Church, Captain Bohr moved five guns down the road, and was directing them into battery when he was killed; his men stampeded, leaving the guns on the field. The gun at Owl Creek served with McDowell in his first engagement, then retired. On Monday Stuart's and Buckland's brigades were engaged on the le,ft of Low. Wallace all day. Sherman was wounded on Sunday, but kept the field until the enemy retired on Monday. First Brigade. (McDowell's.) This brigade, of three regiments, was encamped on the Hamburg and Purdy road, its right on the high ground near Owl Creek, in the fol- lowing order from left to right: Fortieth Illinois, Forty-sixth Ohio, Sixth Iowa. At the first alarm Sunday morning, April 6 ?> 1862, each regiment formed upon its color line. Two companies of the Sixth Iowa, with one gun of Behr's battery, were on guard at the bridge over Owl Creek. About 8 a. m. the brigade was advanced to the brow of the hill overlooking Shiloh Branch, the Fortieth Illinois join- ing the right of Buckland's brigade. After a skirmish with Pond's brigade McDowell was ordered at 10 a. m. to retire to the Purdy road and move to the left to connect with Buckland's brigade near the cross- roads. In obedience to this order the brigade abandoned its camps without a contest and moved by the left flank past McDowell's head- quarters, when it was discovered that the Confederates occupied the road between this brigade and Buckland's. McDowell then moved directly north and put his brigade in line on west side of Crescent field, facing east, where he engaged and drove back the force of the enemy moving into said field. The brigade then moved northeasterly across Crescent Field and into Sowell Field, facing south, its left at Sowell house, where it connected with McClernand at 11.30 a. m., and advanced with him to the center of Marsh's brigade camp. Here the Sixth Iowa was transferred from right to center of brigade, and Thir- teenth Missouri placed between the Fortieth Illinois and Sixth Iowa, the Forty-sixth Ohio slightly in rear and to the extreme right of the line. At about 12 m. the brigade was attacked on its right flank by Trabue. In an engagement lasting until 1.30 p. m. the Sixth Iowa had 52 killed— they were buried in one grave where they fell; the Forty -sixth Ohio had 246 killed and w T ounded, and the Fortieth Illinois 216 killed and wounded. The brigade commander w T as thrown from his horse and disabled. At 2.30 p. m. the brigade retired to the Landing and later formed behind Hurl but. On Monday, the Sixth Iowa and Fortieth Illinois were attached to Garfield's brigade of Army of the Ohio, and remained with him until Wednesday, but were not engaged. Second Brigade. (Stuart's.) This brigade, of three regiments, was encamped at the junction of Hamburg and Purdy road with the Hamburg and Savannah road in the following order from left to right: Fifty-fifth Illinois, Fifty-fourth Ohio. Seventy-first Ohio; a company from each regiment on picket, 57 one at Lick Creek Ford, two on Bark road. These pickets gave warning - , about 8 a. in. April 6, 1862, of the approach of the enemy. Stuart formed his brigade on regimental color lines, but finding that he was exposed to artillery fire from batteries on bluff south of Locust Grove Creek, and obe} r ing orders to guard Lick Creek Ford, he moved, at 10 a. m. to his left, placing the Fifty-fourth Ohio on his left behind McCullers field, the Fifty -fifth Illinois next to right, and the Seventy-first Ohio with its right behind the left of the Fifty-fifth Illinois camp. Chalmers placed his brigade in line on the bluff south of Locust Grove Creek, and, after clearing Stuart's camps with his artillery, moved across the creek and attacked the Fifty-fourth Ohio and Fifty- fif th Illinois in position. After a short conflict Stuart with- drew to a ridge running due east from his headquarters. The right, Seventy-first Ohio, occupying the buildings used as Stuart's head- quarters, was here attacked by the right of Jackson's brigade and very soon retired, leaving a captain and 50 men prisoners. One part of the regiment under the major passed down a ravine to the Tennes- see River, where they were picked up by a gunboat; another part retired to the Landing where they joined the brigade at night. The Fifty-fourth Ohio and Fifty-fifth Illinois, with Stuart in com- mand, successfully resisted the attacks of Chalmers until 2 p. m., when their ammunition was exhausted and they were obliged to fall back to the Landing, where they reformed at the Log House, the Fifty-fourth Ohio in what is now the cemetei*}^, the Fifty-fifth Illinois to its right supporting Silfversparre's battery, where they were engaged in resist- ing Chalmers' Sunday evening attack. Stuart was Avounded on Sunday, and was succeeded on Monday by Col. T. Kilby Smith, who, with the Fifty-fourth Ohio and Fifty-fifth Illinois, joined Sherman's command and fought on right next to Lew. Wallace all day. Third Brigade. (Hildebrand's. ) This brigade was encamped with its right, the Seventy-seventh Ohio, at Shiloh Church; its left, the Fifty-third Ohio, near the Rhea House and separated from the Fifty-seventh Ohio by a small stream with marshy margins. About 7 a. m. April 6, 1862, the brigade formed to meet the attack of the enemy, the Fifty-seventh and Seventy-seventh in advance of their camps in the valley of Shiloh Branch. The Fifty- third, being threatened by an attack in left Hank, formed its line per- pendicular to the left of its camp. While in this position the brigade was attacked from the front by Cleburne's and Wood's brigades. This attack, falling upon the exposed flank of the Fifty-third, compelled it to change front to the rear on left company and form a new line in rear of its camp. Attacked in this position, the regiment fell back disorganized, passing to the rear around the flank of the Forty-ninth Illinois, eight companies going to the Landing at once, two companies under the adjutant, PI C. Dawes, joining the Seventeenth Illinois. The eight companies were reformed near the Landing by the major and sup- ported Bouton's battery in McClernand's seventh line, and on Monday advanced with Marsh's command. The Fifty-seventh and Seventy-seventh were reinforced by Raith's brigade of the First Division and held their positions for some time, when the}% too, fell back disorganized and were not again in line as regiments. Colonel Hildebrand acted as aid for General McClernand during Sunday. 58 Fourth I ))'!(/(!14. 67 General Johnston established his headquarters at the forks of the old Bark and Pittsburg roads. The forward movement to the attack commenced at about sunrise Sunday morning-, April 6, General Johnston in person accompanying the right, Gladden's and Shaver's brigades," until the first' camp was attacked. He then rode to the left, where Cleburne's brigade was advancing to the attack/' and from there conducted Stewart's brigade to the right. He then, from the camp of the Eighteenth Wisconsin, directed the movements of Chalmers's and Jackson's brigades b to the right, while Hardee, who was with him here, c was directing Shaver, Wood, and Stewart to the left. General Johnston then ordered the reserve corps forward, and at 12.30 was placing these troops in position south of the Peach Orchard, he and his staff occupying for over an hour a position due south of the center of the Peach Orchard, on the left bank of Locust Grove Creek. a From this point he went forward behind Bowen's brigade, and was killed near the southeast corner of the Peach Orchard at 2.30 p. m. His body was carried to Corinth that afternoon and was buried at New Orleans, La. Gen. G. T. Beauregard, second in command, and commanding the army after 2. 3D p. m., had his headquarters Saturday night at the pres- ent forks of Bark and Pittsburg roads/ At 10 a. m. Sunday morning the general and his staff moved forward to within one-half mile of the camps (near Plum Orchard Hospital, according to Captain Irwin). About noon he moved up to the Rhea House and at 2 p. m. forward to the crossroads near Water Oaks Pond. Here he received informa- tion of the death of General Johnston and assumed command of the army. At night his headquarters was established at General Sherman's tent, near Shiloh Church. From this point he directed the battle on Monday. When he directed the army to retire he personally placed a brigade and several pieces of artillery in position on the first ridge south of Shiloh Branch; a battery at Wood's house and Breckinridge's corps on the high ground near Bark Road, and then with his staff retired to Corinth via Monterey. THIRD CORPS. (Hardee's. ) This corps, consisting of three brigades, formed the first line of battle just behind Wood's field and cotton press. The three brigades not tilling all the space desired, Gladden's brigade from Bragg's corps was added to the right and placed under Hardee's orders. The corps in line of battle had its center on, and perpendicular to, the Pittsburg road, its left near Owl Creek, its right across the Bark road, in the fol- lowing order of brigades from left to right: Cleburne's Second Bri- gade, Wood's Third Brigade, Shaver's First Brigade, and Gladden's brigade. Gen. T. C. Hindman was intrusted with the command of his own and Wood's brigade, and is, in a few cases, referred to as com- manding a division. He remained with his old brigade — the First — and does not appear to have given any orders to Wood, and is, in nearly every case, referred to as commanding a brigade. He was dis- « 10 War Records, 403. d Statement of Senator Harris. & 10 War Records, 532, 554, 558. «10 War Records, 401. c 10 War Records, 569. 68 abled about 11 a. m. on the 6th, near the northeast corner of the Review field. The Third Corps in its advance from Mickey's had a skirmish on Friday in which a few prisoners were taken on both sides; another engagement with a picket post near Howell's on Saturday, and on Sun- day morning the picket of this corps, under Major I Iardcastle, stationed at the corner of Fraley's and Wood's fields, was attacked at 4.55 a. m. by a reconnoitering party sent out by General Prentiss. This affair between pickets lasted over an hour, the corps in the meantime getting into line and advancing, driving back the reconnoitering party, and fol- lowing - it to the first lino of camps, where the battle became general. General Hardee in person moved with the right of his line, where General Johnston was directing the battle, until the first camps were passed, when Hardee, after consulting with Johnston at the cam]) of the Eighteenth Wisconsin, went to the left" and took general direction of the left flank of the army the remainder of the day. On Monday he was in command on the extreme right of the line.'' His corps remained intact until about 9 a. m. of the 6th, when his troops intermingled with other troops. With the possible exception of two or three regiments of Cleburne's brigade, none of his corps were under his command on Sunday after he moved to the left. Neither of his brigade organizations were under his command on Monday". Under General Beauregard's orders, Hardee commenced the withdrawal of his troops at 1 p. m. Monday. Third Brigade. (Wood's.) This brigade consisted of live regiments and two battalions of infan- try, one battery of artillery, and one company of cavalry. It occupied the center of Hardee's line of battle Saturday night, its right on the Corinth and Pittsburg road, in the following order from left to right: Twenty-seventh Tennessee, Sixteenth Alabama, Forty-fourth Tennes- see, Ninth Arkansas. Eighth Arkansas, Fifty-fifth Tennessee; the Third Mississippi on picket, and Harper's (Mississippi) battery in rear of the infantry. Major Hardcastle with the Third Mississippi, on picket at the corner of two fields one-fourth mile in advance of the main line, was attacked at 4.55 Sunda} r morning by a reconnoitering party sent out by General Prentiss. Hardcastle fought the party until 6.30, c when the brigade advanced to his support and following the reconnoi- tering party moved directly forward to the attack of the Union camps, which it reached at 9 a. m. d In this movement Wood's brigade was guide for first line/ The left of Wood's brigade struck the front of the Fifty-third Ohio camp, its right extending into the camps of Peabody's brigade. The left wing, Twenty-seventh Tennessee, by a movement to the right, avoided the camp of the Fifty third Ohio, which was being swept by the fire of Waterhouse's battery, while the right passed directly through a part of Peabody's camp, pressing the Union forces back until Wood's left had passed Waterhouse's battery and become exposed to a left flank and rear fire/ and the right had reached a field in the rear of Peabody's camp. Here the brigade wheeled to the left and attacked the second line of camps to the rear « 10 War Records, 404, 569. <* 10 War Records, 596. b 10 War Records, 534. « 10 War Records, 580. c 10 War Records, 603. / 10 War Records, 591. 69 of the battery a (Raith's brigade camps). After making left wheel and adjusting his line by bringing the Ninth and Eighth Arkansas to the left flank — making his line from left to right Ninth Arkansas, Eighth Arkansas, Twenty-seventh Tennessee, Sixteenth Alabama, Forty- fourth Tennessee, Fifty-fifth Tennessee, and Third Mississippi — Wood moved directly forward, doubling up the left of Raith's bri- gade and attacking McClernand's Second Brigade on the Corinth road, where he captured Burro ws's battery. In this attack General Wood was thrown from his horse and disabled so that he left the field until 2.30 p. m. The brigade was disorganized and did not again act to- gether during the day. The Twenty-seventh Tennessee rested from 10.50 until 3 p. m., then joined Wood when he resumed command. The Sixteenth Alabama and the Fifty-fifth Tennessee joined Shaver's brigade in its movement to the right under General Stewart 6 and then, with the Third Mississippi, went to the rear with the prisoners, 6 re- turning to the field Monday morning. The Forty-fourth Tennessee became separated from the brigade during the charge and fought to the right of Shaver's brigade in Hor- nets' Nest. d It joined Wood again at 3 o'clock. The Eighth Arkansas and the Ninth Arkansas rested an hour, then after 12 m. joined Cle- burne's and Shaver's forces in an attack at Duncan House/ and at 3 o'clock joined General Wood. The Third Mississippi joined Colonel Vaughan but was not engaged; it joined the Sixteenth Alabama and Fifty-fifth Tennessee as guard for the prisoners, and returned to the field on Monday. Harper's battery became detached Sunday morning and was engaged with Shaver's brigade, and in the afternoon with General Cheatham at Peach Orchard. Avery's Georgia Dragoons went to the right as guard at Greer's Ford. At 2.30 p. m. on Sunday General Wood resumed command and brought together four regiments, the Twenty-seventh Tennessee, Eighth Arkansas, Ninth Arkansas, and the Forty-fourth Tennessee, and reported to General Ruggles west of Duncan House. At 1 o'clock he was sent with General Anderson to the right to attack the Union force at Hornets' Nest. He did not become engaged but followed the retiring troops of Tuttle's brigade, and after the surrender moved toward the front and center near the present schoolhouse. At sunset^ - he moved back to one of the encampments in the rear. Monday morning he formed the remnant of the four regiments, not over 650 rnen/ and went into action on south end of Jones Field. At 11 a. m. he fell back to Shiloh Church, and soon after moved to the right and made a charge at the Water Oaks Pond, where he engaged McCook's division and the left of Sherman's command. He then retired to high ground south of Shiloh Branch. Harper's battery was on the right Monday. The Third Mississippi joined Wood on Monday near Shiloh Church. First Brigade. (Shaver's.) This brigade formed line of battle Saturday on Wood's right, its line extending from Pittsburg road to Bark road in following order from left to right: Seventh Arkansas, Second Arkansas, Sixth Arkansas, a 10 War Records, 605. « 10 War Records, 582, 599, 601, 603. b 10 War Records, 597. /10 War Records, 593. e 10 War Records, 592, 593, 603. 9-10 War Records, 594. a 10 War Records, 608. 70 Third Confederate, Swett's (Mississippi) battery in the rear. The Fifth Arkansas and Miller's (Tennessee) battery arc included with this brigade in "Organization of the army," but are not again mentioned in reports. The brigade moved forward at 6.30 a. m. Sunday meeting with littl« resistance until within one-half mile of the Union camps. Here Swett's and Harper's" batteries took position on the right near East- ern Corinth road and engaged the Union batteries (Hickenlooper's and Munch's). A charge was ordered and Peabody's camp was captured and his men pursued to a ravine and to an old field (Barnes's). The Third Confederate continuing the pursuit beyond the ravine became detached from its brigade and was engaged at Hornets' Nest soon after 9 a. m. Colonel Shaver reorganized his command and was ordered to make change of front to the left, in conjunction with Wood's left wheel, to attack a camp (Raith's). Before completing the movement he was ordered to reform and move by left flank one-half mile" to an old farm, from which he attacked the enemy (Hare's brigade) behind a large field. The left regiments passed through this field, driving back Hare's brigade and occupying the ground one and one-half b hours. The right of the brigade passed to the right of the Review field and became engaged with Sweeny's and Tuttle's brigades and was exposed to a heavy cross tire from the Union batteries in the rear of Tuttle. Swett's battery took position on Shaver's right and engaged those batteries. General Hindman was disabled by the fall of his horse and General Stewart took command of Hindman's troops, consisting of Shaver's brigade and the Sixteenth Alabama and Fifty-fifth Tennessee of Wood's brigade, and placing the Fourth Tennessee on the left of Shaver moved directly cast from the. northwest corner of Review field to Duncan House and attacked the troops behind Duncan Field. Stewart was repulsed, and Shaver's brigade retired about 1 mile to a camp to replenish ammunition. Between 2 and 3 o'clock Shaver's brigade made another attack at the Hornets' Nest and was again repulsed. In this charge Lieutenant Colonel Dean, Seventh Arkansas, was killed within 50 paces of the front of the Fourteenth Iowa. The brigade then fell back and was not again engaged on Sunday. It retired a little farther to the rear and bivouacked for the night, On Monday the brigade formed on the Bark road. After some time the Second and Sixth Arkansas advanced to the left with General Cheatham, where an attack was made about 12 m. and some guns captured, but were soon retaken, and the Confederates driven back in disorder. In attempting to rally his force Colonel Shaver was rendered senseless by the explosion of a shell near him, and his command disorganized. The Seventh Arkansas was in support of a battery on Monday and later in the day became engaged on the right, The Third Confederate was detached to the right on Monday. Swett's (Mississippi) battery, after its participation in the attack at Hornets' Nest on Sunday, was placed by General Ruggles in line of batteries on the east side of Review field, where it was supported by the One hundred and fifty- fourth Tennessee. No record of Swett's battery in engagement on Monda} 7 . « 10 War Records, 609. h 10 War Records, 576. 71 Second Brigadt . (Cleburne's.) This brigade formed the left of Hardee's line, in the following - order from left to right: Second Tennessee (Bate), Twenty-fourth Tennessee, Fifth Tennessee (Hill), Sixth Mississippi, Twenty-third Tennessee, the Fifteenth Arkansas in advance as pickets and skirmishers, Shoup's battalion of artillery, consisting of Calvert's, Trigg's, and Hubbard's Arkansas batteries, in rear of the infantry. The left of the brigade was near Widow Howell's. The advance was begun at 6.30 a. m., Sunday, and at about 8 a. m. the brigade became engaged along Shiloh Branch, its batteries on high ground in the rear. Its progress was impeded by the marshy ground and briers of the branch. After pass- ing these obstructions, the right — Sixth Mississippi and the Twenty- third Tennessee — charged through the camp of the Fifty-third Ohio, but were repulsed by the fire of Waterhouse's battery and the infantry of Raith's and Hildebrand's brigades. The Twenty-third Tennessee was rallied with difficulty, but the Sixth Mississippi renewed the attack with vigor, and charged again and again, until it lost 300 men out of 425 engaged. The left of the brigade met a like defeat in attempting to charge the position of Buckland's brigade and Barrett's battery, and was unable to advance until reinforced by Anderson's brigade from Bragg's corps," and by Russell's and Johnson's brigades from Polk's corps. With these reinforcements Cleburne rallied 60 men of the Sixth Mississippi and about half of the Twenty-Third Tennessee and, in conjunction with troops from the other brigades, advanced along the Pittsburg Landing road to the point where Burrows's battery was captured, where he was joined by the Eighth Arkansas. With the fragments of these three regiments, Cleburne joined General Stewart at 12, noon, in an attack upon position at Duncan House, where some of Cleburne's men were taken prisoners by the Seventh Illinois. At 12.30 p. m. , the Sixth Mississippi retired from the held, and the Twenty- third Tennessee was ordered to the rear to reorganize. Cleburne then went in search of the other regiments of his brigade and, at 3 p. m., found the Fifth and Twenty-fourth Tennessee and Fifteenth Arkansas resting under the brow of a hill, where they were soon joined by the Twenty-third Tennessee. The Fifth Tennessee, Twenty-fourth Tennessee, and Fifteenth Arkansas had advanced through Buckland's camp at about 10 a. m., and had joined Pond and Trabue, 6 and with them were engaged at 12 m. to 2.30 p. m. in front of Marsh's brigade camp, and had passed to rear of that camp when found by Cleburne. Colonel Bate, of the Second Tennessee, was wounded in front of Buck- land's brigade, and the regiment was somewhat disorganized and was not again engaged on Sunday. On Monday, the Second Tennessee was engaged on the right under General Stewart. When Cleburne joined his left wing at 3 p. m. on Sunday, he advanced to the east side of Tilghman Creek, where he was engaged at 1.30 p. m. in the attack upon McClernand's sixth line. He then moved forward until he came under fire of the artillery and gunboats, where he halted until dark, when he was ordered to the rear and retired to a camp near the Baik « 10 War Records, 471. b Roman's Military Operations of General Beauregard. Extract from report of Lieutenant and Aid-de-canip A. R. Chisolm. 72 road. On Monday, soon after daylight, ho advanced along the Bark road with four regiments (Fifth, Twenty -third, and Twenty-fourth Tennessee, and the Fifteenth Arkansas), now reduced to 800 men, and became engaged in a thick underbrush at the left of General Breckin- ridge and the right of General Wood, where his brigade was repulsed and completely routed. The Fifteenth Arkansas was the only regi- ment rallied. This continued in the tight until reduced to 58 men. These were then ordered to the rear to replenish ammunition. Shoup's batteries were in position Sunday morning on high ground south of Shiloh Branch. Trigg's and Hubbard's batteries formed a part of Ruggles's line at 4 p. m. Sunday. No information in regard to these batteries on Monday. SECOND CORPS. ( Bragg' s.) This corps of two divisions formed the second line of battle and formed Saturday night, April 5, 1862, 800 yards in rear of the first line across, and perpendicular to, the Pittsburg road; Gladden's bri- gade of Withers's division forward on Hardee's right; Ruggles's divi- sion on the left, its right on the Bark road; Withers's division to right of the Bark road. The corps commenced its forward movement at about 0.30 a. m. on Sunday. Soon after, the left brigade, Pond's, was detached to the left, and Chalmers's brigade moved forward to the right of Gladden. The advance was continued in this order until Hardee's line became engaged, when Bragg, "finding the first line unequal to the work before it,'' moved his whole corps to its support. In this movement Ruggles's division intermingled with the first line, and the two corps were not again separated during the battle. With- ers on the right kept his Second and Third Brigades well in hand and leading them to the extreme right continued in command of them all day. General Bragg in person followed his right and was with Gladden's brigade when Prentiss's camp was captured." There were present at that time General Johnston, General Bragg, General Hardee, General Withers, General Hindman, and several brigade commanders." Gen- eral Bragg remained in this vicinity until 10.30 a. m. when he met General Polk at the left center, and by agreement with him returned to the right center, where he directed several charges at Hornets' Nest without success. Learning that General Johnston had been killed, General Bragg went to the right and assumed command of the forces there, consisting of Breckinridge's two brigades, Withers's two bri- gades, and one brigade of Cheatham's division. With this force he pressed the Union left along the Hamburg road until he reached the rear of Prentiss and Wallace and connected his troops with those of the extreme left. This surround compelled the surrender of Prentiss about the time the sun was disappearing/' Bragg re-formed his com- mands and was placing his troops in order for another advance when he received orders to withdraw his troops. Bragg remained with Beauregard near Shiloh Church Sunday night and Monday morning was sent to the Confederate left, where the troops of Pond, Wood, Cleburne, Cheatham, Gibson, Anderson, and Trabue were engaged, in "10 War Records, 537, 567. ''10 War Records, 466. 73 about the order named, from left to right. Under General Beaure- gard's orders he commenced to retire his troops at 2 p. m. i SECOND DIVISION. (Withers's. ) In this division were the brigades of Gladden, Jackson, and Chal- mers. It formed the right of Bragg's corps and formed in line Sat- urday night on the Bark road one-fourth mile east of the forks of Pittsburg Landing road. Gladden's brigade was sent forward to the first line, Jackson's brigade 300 yards directly in rear of Gladden, on right of Bark road, Chalmers's, on Jackson's right, extending the line to tributary of Lick Creek. In the advance Chalmers soon came up to Gladden's right and joined it in an attack upon Prentiss's camp. After capture of Prentiss's camp Withers was ordered, with Chalmers and Jackson, down the Bark road to Lick Creek to attack the Union left. He succeeded in driving Stuart back and following him, pressing back the Union left, reaching the rear of Prentiss and Wallace, and receiving the surrender of part of these troops. He then moved to the right along the ridge south of Dill Branch and formed in line, then advanced into the valley of Dill Branch, from which place he made the last attack Sun da}'. He then withdrew, his division becoming disorganized. Chalmers's bri- gade and one regiment of Jackson's brigade bivouacked in Stuart's camp; Withers personally in Prentiss' camp. On Monday the division had commenced to retire from the field and had marched i mile when it was recalled and engaged on the right until 2 p. m., when it retired to Mickeys. Firxt Brigade. (Gladden's.) This brigade was attached temporarily to Hardee's corps and took position Saturday night, April 5, at the right of the first line of battle, its left on the Bark road, in the following order, from left to right: Twenty-sixth Alabama, Twenty-fifth Alabama, Twenty-second Ala- bama. Twenty-first Alabama, First Louisiana, and Robertson's battery in rear of infantry. The brigade advanced at 6.30 a. m. Sunday along the line of Bark and Eastern Corinth roads until it became engaged, at 8.30 a. m., in front of Prentiss's camps. The Twenty-second Alabama formed across the Eastern Corinth road. The Twenty-sixth, crowded out of position on the left by Shaver's brigade, took position on the right. In this attack General Gladden was mortally wounded, and Colonel Adams assumed command and drove Prentiss back, and at 9 a. m. took possession of his camps and formed his brigade in a square at Prentiss's headquarters, where it remained inactive until about 2 o'clock. At 2.30 Colonel Adams was wounded and Colonel Deas took command, and soon after led the brigade, except the Twenty-sixth Alabama, to the right and reported to General Breckinridge and becamed engaged in the last attack upon Prentiss. Here the Twenty-first and Twenty- fifth Alabama became separated from the brigade, and Colonel Deas formed the First Louisiana and Twenty-second Alabama (224 men) on the left of Jackson's brigade and remained in line until ordered back 74 to camp lor the night. The Twenty-sixth Alabama meantime made a charge across the west side of Peach Orchard, supported on Left by Forrest's cavalry in the woods. On Monday L50 men of the Twenty- sixth Alabama joined Chalmers in two engagements, and (hen left the field. The Twenty-first Alabama was in Colonel Moore's command on Monday," the First Louisiana and the Twenty-second Alabama with Ruggles on the left of the line, where they were engaged until reduced to 60 men. 6 Robertson's (Alabama) battery of 12-pounder Napoleons was first engaged on Eastern Corinth road in front of Prentiss's camp. After that, from a position in Prentiss's camp, it engaged the Union batteries in Peach Orchard and then reported to Ruggles, east of Review field. On Monday it was with the Confederate right. The Twenty-fifth Alabama joined a Missouri regiment on Monday c (First Missouri, Bowen's brigade). Second Brigade. (Chalmers's.) This brigade, called the ''Mississippi Brigade," formed the right of Bragg's line, its right resting on swamps of Lick Creek in the follow- ing order from left to right: Fifty-second Tennessee, Fifth Missis- sippi, Ninth Mississippi, Seventh Mississippi, Tenth Mississippi, with Gage's (Alabama) battery in the rear, it advanced at 6.30 a. m. Sun- day and soon joined Gladden's right and made a gradual left wheel until it struck the left of Prentiss's camp and by a charge of the Tenth Mississippi, followed by the Seventh and Ninth Mississippi, the Eight- eenth Wisconsin was driven from its camp at ( J a. m., the three regi- ments pursuing across the ravine and to the hill beyond, where they came under fire from Hurlbut's division in the Peach Orchard and were ordered by General Johnston back to the captured camp. From the Eighteenth Wisconsin camp the brigade was conducted '"by right flank file right" across the ravine and to the Bark road and along that road until its right rested on Lick Creek, where it re-formed its battle line facing north and advanced across Locust Grove Branch against Stuart's camps. When this advance began Union skirmishers fired into the Fifty-second Tennessee, stampeding the regiment so that only two companies could be rallied. These companies were attached to the Fifth Mississippi. As the infantry advanced Gage's battery, sta- tioned on high ground south of the ravine, shelled Stuart's camp, com- pelling him to move to his left rear, forming his left behind an orchard. Chalmers moved upon this position and drove Stuart back 300 yards to a ridge, where he maintained himself until about 2 p. m., when he retired, closely followed by Chalmers, who was supported on his right by Clanton's cavalry, moving down the banks of the Tennessee. Swinging to the left against the exposed Union left, Chalmers's left reached the Hamburg and Savannah road near the camp of the Twenty- eighth Illinois, where he assisted in the capture of the troops of Pren- tiss and Wallace that had faced to the rear and were attempting to make their way to the river. The Fourteenth Iowa, a captain and four men of the Twenty-eighth Illinois, and colonel of the Eight- eenth Missouri surrendered to the Ninth Mississippi. The brigade then moved directly east of the ridge south of Dill Branch until its a 10 War Records, 556. c io War Records, 544. &10 War Records, 539. ^Chalmers's report. 75 right was near the river; it then advanced into the valley of Dill Branch. Skirmishers of the Ninth Mississippi crossed the ravine and ascended to the brow of the bluff, where they came under tire of the artillery. "The brigade struggled in vain to ascend the hill, which was very steep, making charge after charge without success, but contin- ued to light until night closed hostilities on both sides."" Gage's bat- tery was put in position in rear of the brigade, but was soon disabled and was compelled to retire, leaving one gun in the ravine in front of its position. It was not again engaged. The brigade retired to Stu- art's camps, where it bivouacked Sunday night. On Monday it was joined by several detached regiments and was engaged on the Confed- erate right south of Peach Orchard until 2 p. m., when it received orders to retire. There are no reports on file from regiments or battery. Third Brigade. (Jackson's.) This brigade formed on the right of the Bark road in the second line, 300 yards in the rear of Gladden's brigade, in the following order from left to right: Seventeenth Alabama, Eighteenth Alabama, Nineteenth Alabama. Second Texas, Girardey's battery in rear of infantry. It advanced at 6.30 a. in. Sunday, following Gladden's brigade, and came up with that brigade at Prentiss's headquarters, where General John- ston in person ordered the brigade to the left in conjunction with movements of Wood and Shaver. Before it had proceeded far, the order was changed, and Jackson was ordered to follow Chalmers to the right, where the brigade formed on the south side of a deep ravine. Girardey's battery engaged the enemy in Peach Orchard from Pren- tiss's 10 War Records, 471, 496, 497, 507, 585. 78 directly east along the Pittsburg' road to Duncan Field, where the battery was placed in Ruggles's artillery line and the infantry moved to the right, where it joined other troops in an attack at the Hornets 1 Nest, where it was repulsed, and the Twentieth Louisiana retired from the field. The other regiments returned to the attack and followed the retiring Union troops to the place of surrender. The brigade then moved forward to a ravine — head of Dill Branch — where it remained fifteen minutes under artillery fire, and then, at sunset, retired, General Anderson, with the Ninth Texas and First Florida, bivouacking in the apple orchard, near the big spring. The other regiments were scattered, but were all represented with the brigade on Monday, and were engaged north of the Pittsburg road and later in front of Marsh's brigade camp. The Washington Artillery was engaged on Monday on the right, near the wheat field, where it lost three guns. The guns were recaptured, but it left three caissons and battery wagon and forge on the field. Third Brigade. (Pond's.) This brigade formed the left of Bragg' s line of battle Saturday night, its left near Owl Creek and extending beyond Hardee's left in the fol- lowing order from left to right: Thirty-eighth Tennessee, Crescent Regiment, Eighteenth Louisiana, Orleans Guard, Sixteenth Louisiana, with Ketchum's Alabama battery in rear. At 8 a. m. Sunda}^ the Thirty-eighth Tennessee, the Crescent Regiment, and one section of the battery were sent li miles to the left to Owl Creek road. The other regiments and two sections of the battery, connecting with the left of Anderson's brigade, advanced to Shiloh Branch, where they became engaged with the skirmishers of McDowell's brigade. Mc- Dowell was ordered to withdraw and Pond gained the first line of camps without a conflict. Changing direction to the right, Pond was fired into by the Confederates and retired 100 yards and rested until about noon when he joined the left of Trabue's brigade in Crescent Field. He then moved forward to the valley of Tilghman Creek, where at 1.30 p. m. he was ordered by General Hardee to charge the Union lines, which were in position in the camps of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Illinois. He formed his regiments en echelon, the Eighteenth Louisiana in front on the left, followed by the Orleans Guard, and that by the Sixteenth Louisiana, and moved directly upon the Union line. He was repulsed with heavy loss and retired to high land on the west side of the creek, where he bivouacked Sunday night, with his right at Oglesby's headquarters, his left at Owl Creek. The Thirty-eighth Tennessee, the Crescent Regiment, and a section of Ketchum's battery, when detached in the morning, moved down Owl Creek road to the bridge on Purdy road, where they remained on guard until 2 p. m. when they were ordered to the center. They moved by the flank to cross-roads, where Beauregard ordered them to the east along Pittsburg road. At Duncan Field the section of artillery was placed on left of Ruggles's artillery line and the two regiments directed to the left, where they engaged the right flank of troops at the Hor- nets' Nest, Colonel Looney leading his regiment, the Thirty-eighth Tennessee, into the camp of the Third Iowa in time to assist in the cap- ture of the Twelfth Iowa, the Crescent Regiment capturing a part of 79 the Prentiss troops. The Thirty-eighth Tennessee then joined its brigade at Ogles by 's headquarters. The Crescent Regiment bivouacked in a "near-by camp."" On Monday the brigade, except the Crescent Regiment, was engaged upon the extreme left of the army, and opened the battle by an artil- lery duel between its battery and those of Lew. Wallace. The brigade was driven back gradually to the Purdy road, when it was sent to join Trabue's right. It soon returned to the left and then fell back to the church disorganized. Colonel Loone}\ with his own regiment and parts of live other regiments (numbers not known), made the last charge of the day, his command forming at the church under personal direc- tion of General Beauregard and charging forward directly over the site of Sherman's headquarters to near the Purdy and Hamburg road, then retiring through the rear guard stationed south of Shiloh Branch. The Crescent Regiment was sent Monday morning to the right, where it joined the Nineteenth Louisiana and First Missouri in support of the Washington Artillery," and then in conjunction with Colonel Wheeler covered the retreat from that part of the field and camped at night at Mickey's. Ketchum's battery was engaged with the brigade all day and lost two guns. 6 FIRST CORPS. (Polk's.) This corps of two divisions of two brigades each formed Saturday night in column of brigades behind the second line, its center on the main Corinth road, the first division in front. In the advance Sunday morning the head of this corps passed Beauregard's headquarters, at the fork of the Bark and Pittsburg roads, at 7.04 a. m. At the Seay Field Stewart's brigade was detached to the right; Russell's brigade was led directly to the front and became engaged under the personal direction of division and corps commanders. General Clark, commanding the division, led in the charge upon the camp of the Fifty-third Ohio, and saon after passing that camp was wounded and left the field. General Stewart succeeded to the com- mand, but did not bring the division under his immediate orders. General Cheatham, commanding second division, sent his first bri- gade directly to the front, where it was engaged under Polk's orders. He then took personal direction of Stephens's brigade, conducting it first to the left, and then at 10.30 a. m. to the right center, where he was engaged at Hornets' Nest until about noon when he moved to the right and joined General Breckenridge and was engaged at Peach Orchard, and on Monday near the extreme left of the line. CAVALRY. The First Mississippi Cavalry operated as a reserve to Cheatham's division. At about 5.30 p. m. on Sunday, just after the surrender of Prentiss, it charged upon and captured Ross's battery as it was mak- ing its way to the river. It afterwards crossed the head of Dill Branch and started with 30 or 40 men to charge another battery, but finding itself in presence of the infantry, retired and proceeded to the bank of the Tennessee River at Brown's Ferry. « 10 War Records, 524. & 10 War Records, 543. 80 Brewer's Ca/valry. Two companies were sent Sunday morning in the direction of Adams- villc to watch the movements of Lew. Wallace; other companies engaged in the rear of Russell's brigade until afternoon, when they were sent to the extreme left and were engaged against the Fourteenth Missouri and in Wharton's charge. They bivouacked Sunday night in the val- ley of Tilglnnan ('reek near Owl Creek. General Polk in person followed the line of the Pittsburg road. He assumed personal direction of the battle in front of Rhea House, direct- ing the two brigades of his own corps and one each of Hardee's and Bragg's corps, and when the line was finally carried he pushed his commands forward without waiting to reorganize them. He says his three brigades — Stewart's, Russell's, and Johnson's — with occasionally a regiment from some other corps, fought over the same ground three times. He was present at the surrender of Prentiss and directed some of the troops toward the Landing, and when ordered to withdraw retired to his bivouac of Saturday night. On Monday he commanded the left center again and fought over the same ground as on Sunday. This corps and its divisions were entirely disintegrated before reach- ing the first camps of the enemy and did not again serve in the battle as divisions or corps. FIRST DIVISION. First Brigade. (Russell's.) This brigade bivouacked Saturday night across the Pittsburg road behind Stewart's brigade, in order from left to right, as follows: Eleventh Louisiana, Twentj^-second Tennessee, Thirteenth Tennessee, Twelfth Tennessee, with Bankhead's (Tennessee) battery in the rear. In the advance on Sunday it followed the Pittsburg road to near Shiloh Branch, when it became engaged on the right of the road, its left, the Eleventh Louisiana, joining the Seventeenth Louisiana of Anderson's brigade" and the Sixth Mississippi of Cleburne's brigade in the attack upon the Fifty-third Ohio camp and the Union forces behind that camp. In this attack the Eleventh Louisiana was disorganized, a part of it afterwards joining Stewart's brigade 6 and a part continued under Russell for a time. The colonel and sixty men were engaged on the right on Monday. The Twelfth Tennessee passed to the right of the Fifty-third Ohio camp into the Fourth Illinois Cavalry camp, where it joined Stewart's brigade, and supported the Fourth Tennessee in a charge upon McAllister's battery, and afterwards supported Bankhead's battery on the ground first occupied by McAllister. The Thirteenth Tennessee also passed to the right of the Fifty-third Ohio camp, then left wheeled and charged Waterhouse's battery in the flank, capturing two guns. It then moved directly past Shiloh Church, and from there along Pitts- burg road to Duncan Field, where it supported Stanford's battery in Ruggles's artillery line. The Twenty-second Tennessee, remaining under Russell's command, moved through the camp and over the Water- house battery position to near the crossroads, where the Fifth Tennes- «10 War Records, 506, 511. &10 War Records, 428. 81 see, Lieutenant Colonel Venable, attached itself to Russell's command. Russell then joined Trabue's left in front of Marsh's brigade camp. He then, with the Twenty- second Tennessee, moved into the valley of Tilghman Creek and up that creek to the place where Prentiss surren- dered. Russell says that Prentiss surrendered to men of the Twenty- second Tennessee. * The Twelfth and Thirteenth joined Russell here, but no part of the brigade advanced beyond the place of surrender. The three regiments retired to Marsh's brigade camp and bivouacked Sunday night, On Monday the remnant of the three regiments, a ' 'very small force," was engaged on the left, next to Pond, for a time, and then fell back to Shiloh Church, where they came under the immediate com- mand of General Beauregard, who bore the colors to the front, but was soon obliged to retire. Bankhead's battery was engaged at the place occupied by McAllis- ter's battery, and in Ruggles's line on Sunday, and on the right, Monday. Second Brigade. (Stewart's.) This brigade formed the advance of its corps and bivouacked across the main Pittsburg road in the following order from left to right: Fifth Tennessee, Thirty-third Tennessee, Thirteenth Arkansas, Fourth Tennessee, with Stanford's battery in the rear. It moved forward at 7 a. m. Sunday morning one-half mile and deposited knapsacks, then passed the cotton press and its left regiment — the Fifth Tennessee — came into Fraley Field, where it received a shot from a Union battery that killed one man and cut the flagstaff. From "two cabins" Gen- eral Johnston directed the brigade to the right, and conducted it toward the camp of the Eighteenth Wisconsin, where General John- ston went and met General Hardee/' General Stewart moved his brigade by the right flank due east, from north side of Seay Field, until his right reached the Eastern Corinth road, his command in "open woods" in front of the enemy's (Peabody's) camp, "from which he had been driven." Here losing sight of General Johnston, he moved his brigade by left flank in line of battle through the camp and be} T ond it/ Thence, cooperating with the left movement of Wood and Shaver, he moved " by the left flank," along the rear of Peabody's brigade camp, and behind Gibson's brigade, until the Thirteenth Arkansas was in the Fourth Illinois Cavalry camp, then by right flank in line of battle, and halted for orders. Here occurred the "fire in the rear," occasioned by the Fourth Louisiana, on Gibson's left, firing to their left rear upon an officer "supposed to be a Federal." This left rear fire took effect in the ranks of the Thirteenth Arkansas. This regiment, mistaking the fire of the Fourth Louisiana for that of the enemy, returned the fire, and were joined by the Thirty-third Tennessee firing into the Twelfth Tennessee just then passing their front, and into the Eighth and Ninth Arkansas just being transferred to Wood's left. From the Fourth Illinois Cavalry camp Stewart led his three left regiments north across a small stream and laid them down while he returned for the Fourth Tennessee, which he brought forward to the same place, but found that his three regiments had moved forward. a 10 War Records, 404, 407. & 10 War Eecords, 433. 605a— 03 6 82 Here Stewart received orders to charge McAllister's battery at the northwest corner of Review field. He placed Stanford's battery in the Fourth Illinois Cavalry camp, and with the Fourth and Twelfth Ten- nessee behind it as a reserve, passed to the right behind Wood's brigade and joining Shaver's left charged the battery and captured one gun at 11 a. in., the Fourth and Twelfth Tennessee holding the ground where the batteiy had been stationed. Here General Hindman pro- posed to Stewart to join forces and attack the enemy on Shaver's right in Hornets' Nest. While arranging for this movement General Hind- man was disabled and General Stewart took command of Hindman's force. Placing the Fourth Tennessee on the left of Shaver's brigade, he moved through the woods to Duncan Field and engaged the Union force that occupied the east side of that field until Shaver reported his troops out of ammunition, when Stewart withdrew the Fourth Tennes- see to a position where it captured the gun and joined the Twelfth Tennessee, at about noon, in support of Bankhead's battery, which was being closeh 7 pressed by Union troops. The Fourth Tennessee then retired for ammunition. In the meantime the Fifth and Thirty -third Tennessee and the Thir- teenth Arkansas were by General Hardee's order moved forward from the ravine where Stewart left them and became engaged under Preston Smith's command near the crossroads. Later the Fifth Tennessee was attached to Russell's command farther to the left and then moved to the attack upon the right flank of the Hornets' Nest position. It then retired to a camp for the night. The Thirty-third Tennessee joined General Stewart again to the right of Ruggles's batteries and moved by the left flank along the road to the Forty -first Illinois camp, where it remained until night and then retired to a camp near the crossroads. The Thirteenth Arkansas, after its engagement at the crossroads, was in support of Smith's battery to the right, where Lieutenant Colonel Grayson was mortally wounded. It then retired to Beauregard's headquarters, and then to camp for the night near "Stewart's General Hospital." The Fourth Tennessee, after its separation from General Stewart, joined Preston Smith's command in Marsh's brigade cam}) and was engaged from about 1 to 2 p. m. It bivouacked Sunday night near where it captured the gun. General Stewart, after his own brigade had passed from his com- mand, organized a command, consisting of Walker's Second Tennessee, part of the Eleventh Louisiana, and another regiment of Cleburne's command, and made a second attack at Duncan House. Falling back, he was joined by the Thirty-third Tennessee and moved along Pitts- burg road and into the Hornets' Nest at the time of surrender. On Monday he had Bates's Second Tennessee and Thirteenth Arkansas under his command on the Confederate right. Colonel Strahl sa} T s the Fourth Tennessee was engaged on Monday "near the left of the line." He also says he was. "on the left of the Washington Artil- lery." Washington Artillery was on the right Monday. The Fifth Tennessee was with Chalmers on the extreme right; Thirty-third Tennessee on the left with General Cheatham. Stanford's battery, after its first engagement Sunday in the camp of the Fourth Illinois Cavalry, became engaged on the right of Ruggles's artillery line and on Monday near the same place. It lost four guns. 83 SECOND DIVISION. (Cheatham's.) This division of two brigades bivouacked Saturday night in the rear of the First Division, on the Pittsburg Landing road. Soon after the advance was begun on Sunday the Second Brigade was detached, under the command of General Cheatham, who directed its movements all day on Sunday. His personal movements are the same as the Second Brigade. Sunday night General Cheatham retired to his Saturday night bivouac. On Monday morning he was engaged for some time in arresting a stampede which came from the front. He then led the Sixth Tennessee, six companies of the Ninth Tennessee, the One hun- dred and fifty-fourth Tennessee, part of the Fifteenth Tennessee, and 100 men of Walker's Second Tennessee to an open field near Shiloh Church, where he received orders to report to General Breckinridge. He moved half a mile to the right, then was ordered back and to the left. In this movement the One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee and Walker's Tennessee became detached and remained at the right. With parts of the One hundred and fifty-fourth, Ninth, and Fifteenth he moved northwest, passing near Shiloh Church; then to left of the Confederate line, where he was joined by Gibson's brigade and by the Twenty-seventh and Thirty-third Tennessee, and was engaged four hours. At 2.30 p. m. he was ordered to withdraw from the field. First Brigade. (B. R. Johnson's.) This brigade moved forward Sunday morning along Pittsburg road with its division until 8.30 a. m. , when it, in crossing Fraley Field, came under fire of the artilleiy. Here General Cheatham was detached with the Second Brigade, and Gen. B. R. Johnson led his brigade, first obliquely to the left, then by right flank until the center — left of Blythe's Mississippi — rested on the Pittsburg road, its regiments in order from left to right: Walker's Second Tennessee, Fifteenth Ten- nessee, Blythe's Mississippi, One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee, with Polk's Tennessee battery in the rear. At the crossing of Shiloh Branch Johnson came up with the brigades of Cleburne, Anderson, and Russell, which had commingled and were making ineffectual attempts to force the Union lines. General Polk at once assumed direction, and, without waiting to reorganize the shat- tered brigades, ordered the whole force forward without regard to corps, division, brigade, or even regimental organization. Blythe's Mississippi, with the Seventeenth Louisiana, moved around the point of the hill north of Rhea House and attacked Waterhouse's battery on its right flank. In this action Colonel Blythe was killed, his regi- ment halting in a ravine between the battery and Shiloh Church. The One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee, with other troops, charged directly through the camp of the Fifty-third Ohio, and attacked Waterhouse's battery in front just as the Thirteenth Tennessee reached its left flank. Both regiments claim the two guns captured here. Polk awards them to the Thirteenth Tennessee. The One hundred and fifty-fourth pressed forward up the ridge toward Woolf Field, capturing another gun of Waterhouse's battery and one gun of 84 Schwartz's battery, near the crossroads. Here the One hundred and fifty-fourth was joined by the three left regiments of Stewart's bri- gades and took position in Woolf Field, where they were engaged for a time, and were then driven back. General Johnson, who was engaged with his left regiments in the attack upon Barrett's battery and Buckland's brigade, after several repulses finally succeeded, in conjunction with other commands, in car- rying the position, but was wounded in the final assault near the church at 11 a. m., he says, and the command passed to Col. Preston Smith, of the One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee. During this conflict Polk's battery was stationed near the Rhea House, where Captain Polk was severely wounded and his battery disabled, so that only one gun went forward to the crossroads, where it was captured. At the cross- roads Colonel Smith learned of General Johnson's disability and took command of the brigade, which was now greatly reduced, the Fifteenth Tennessee having only 150 men, Blythe's Mississippi only 200. Smith formed his brigade "just beyond the crossroads, on the right of the broad avenue leading by the second encampment" (Marsh's). He had scarcely formed his line when the enemy advanced upon him through the woods from the north and made a fierce attack, which was kept up more than an hour, during which time Smith brought up the Fourth and Thirty-third Tennessee to reenf orce his line. He finally succeeded, at about 2 p. m., in driving back the enemy. He then moved along Pittsburg road to Duncan Field, where the One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee supported Swett's battery in Ruggles's line and the Second Tennessee (Walker's) supported the Thirty-eighth Tennessee. The Fifteenth Tennessee and Bfythe's Mississippi were sent for ammunition and did not return. None of this brigade advanced beyond the place of Prentiss's surrender. A part of the Second Tennessee bivouacked at the crossroads. Blythe's regiment near Shiloh Church, the other regi- ments with Smith returned to Saturday night bivouac. On Monday the One hundred and fifty-fourth Tennessee, a portion of Blythe's Mississippi, and one company of Walker's Second Tennessee, under Colonel Smith, joined Chalmers on the Confederate right and retired with him in the afternoon. The Fifteenth Tennessee was engaged under Colonel Maney on the Confederate right. Second Brigade. (Stephens's.) This brigade formed the rear of Polk's corps and bivouacked Satur- day night across the Pittsburg road in the following order from left to right: Seventh Kentucky, Ninth Tennessee, Sixth Tennessee, First Tennessee (battalion) with Smith's (Mississippi) battery in the rear. Before the forward movement began on Sunday, Colonel Maney, with the First Tennessee (battalion) and the Nineteenth Tennessee from the Reserve Corps, was ordered to the right to guard a ford of Lick Creek. He did not return until 2.30 p. ra., when he rejoined his brigade at the Peach Orchard and assumed command of the same. In his absence Colonel Stephens commanded the brigade, which was accompanied by General Cheatham in person. This brigade moved forward on the Pittsburg Landing road 1 mile when, at about 8.30 a. m., it was deployed to the left as a support to Bragg's line. After half an hour it was ordered to the right, and at 85 10 a. in. reached a position in front of the Hornets' Nest where it formed with the right — Sixth Tennessee — in a little field (Wheat Field, see Walker's statement) and its left extended to Duncan Field/' Smith's battery was placed in position and engaged the enemy about an hour when the brigade made two assaults, its right in a thick under- brush, its left in an open field. It was repulsed, and its commander, Colonel Stephens, disabled. Falling back to the Hamburg road the brigade moved to the right at noon, and joined General Breckinridge's force south of the Peach Orchard. h Here Colonel Maney joined and assumed command of the brigade. At 2.30 p. m. he led the First, Ninth, and Nineteenth Tennessee in a charge across the Peach Orchard, in which he broke the Union line at the northeast corner of said field. The Sixth Tennessee and Seventh Kentucky were brought up by Gen- eral Cheatham, and the brigade took position in a small ravine east of the Hamburg road and awaited a supply of ammunition. It was not further engaged on Sunday, the Nineteenth Tennessee returning to its own brigade, Statbam\s. The First Tennessee and four companies of the Ninth Tennessee, under command of Colonel Maney, bivouacked Sunday night on the field, and on Monday were joined by the Fifteenth Tennessee and were engaged on the right of the Confederate line under General Withers. The Sixth Tennessee and six companies of the Ninth Tennessee retired Sunday night with General Cheatham to Saturday night's bivouac, and on Monday were engaged with him on the Confederate left until 2.30 p. m., when they were ordered to retire. There is no record where the Seventh Kentucky camped Sunda} T night. On Monday it served under Breckinridge, near where some buildings were burned. Smith's battery was first engaged for one hour in front of Hornets' Nest on Sunday. Two of its guns were engaged with General Cheat- ham on Monday. The First Tennessee, under Colonel Maney, retired from the field at 4 p. m. on Monday and marched to Monterey and occupied the camp that it had been in before the battle. Colonel Maney claims that his battalion reached its camp " with but one single absentee not properly accounted for, and this one reached camp early next day." RESERVE CORPS. (Breckinridge's.) This corps of three brigades bivouacked Saturday night along the Bark road, between Micke}^'s and the Pittsburg Landing road, in regu- lar order of brigades, the First in advance and the Third in the rear. At the intersection of the Bark and Pittsburg Landing roads the First Brigade was detached on Sunday morning and sent by main road directly to Shiloh Church. The Second and Third Brigades were led by General Breckinridge along the Bark and Eastern Corinth roads, and were put in position about noon by General Johnston in person, south of the Peach Orchard, where they were first engaged about 1 p. m. General Breckinridge served personally all day with his Second and Third Brigades, uniting them to his First Brigade at the time and «10 War Records, 438. HO War Records, 438, 537. 86 place of Prentiss's surrender, and then conducted the entire command to the east along the ridge south of Dill Branch to near the river, where it was under fire from gunboats and batteries. At dark Breck- inridge withdrew to encampments of the enemy. On Monday he was engaged with his three brigades uearly intact on south side of Corinth road behind Duncan Field, his right joining Hardee about the Peach Orchard. When the army retired Breckin- ridge formed the rear guard. Morgan's squadron of Kentucky cavalry and Phil. Thompson's com- pany (Kentucky cavalry) were attached to this corps, but do not appear to have been engaged. First Brigadi . (Trabue'H.) This brigade formed the advance of the reserve corps and reached the forks of the Bark and Pittsburg roads about 8 a. m. Sunday morn- ing, April 6, 1862. It was sent forward on Pittsburg road to support General Polk's line and soon after deployed to the left of the road in the following order from left to right: Fourth Kentucky, Sixth Ken- tucky, Thirty-first Alabama, Fifth Kentucky, Fourth Alabama, Crew's Tennessee battalion, Third Kentucky, with Cobb's (Kentucky) battery and Byrne's (Mississippi) battery in the rear. It passed Shiloh Church in line of battle about 11.30 a. m. — the Fifth Kentuck}' opening to right and left to pass the Church (Lofland's statement). It advanced due north from the Church to the "verge of a large crescent-shaped field." Here the Third Kentucky. Fourth Alabama, and Crew's battalion and Byrne's battery were detached by General Beauregard and ordered to support General Anderson on the right. The Third and Fourth Kentucky remained detached all day: there is no record of place where they were engaged. Cobb's battery was put in position in front of the Fifth Kentucky in the avenue in front of Marsh's brigade camp. Colonel Trabue sheltered his com- mand in a slight ravine, on the verge of the field, and rode forward to make observations. He discovered two camps to his left and front (Hare's and Marsh's), the enemy still oceupjingthe camps. He moved his command by the left flank into this field and confronted the enemy. Here he was joined on the left by parts of Russell's and Cleburne's brigades — Twenty-second Tennessee, part of Eleventh Louisiana, Fifth Tennessee (Venable), and Fifth Tennessee (Hill) — and on his right by part of Anderson's brigade. The Union troops mentioned by Trabue in his front were the Fort} T -sixth Ohio, Sixth Iowa, and Thirteenth Missouri. After an engagement of one hour and a quar- ter, commencing about noon, Trabue ordered a charge and drove the enemy through their camp (Marsh's) and into the woods in the rear, where he encountered and dispersed a Missouri regiment and soon after reached the field where Prentiss surrendered, where his left joined the troops from the right, and Crew's battalion was detached with prisoners. In the meantime Cobb's battery; occupying its first position in Marsh's camp, had been taken and retaken. It had lost all of its horses and was abandoned. Four of its guns were removed with mules Sunday night, but the battery was not again in action. Byrne's battery was engaged in Ruggles's artillery line. 87 After the surrender of Prentiss, Trabue, with the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Kentucky and Thirty-first Alabama joined Breckinridge and moved down the ridge south of Dill Branch and occupied a posi- tion, on the crest of the hill, at mounds, overlooking the Tennessee River, where he came under tire from gunboats, which he endured until nearly dark, when he withdrew to the crossroads, where he was joined by the Third Kentucky, Fourth Alabama, and Byrne's battery, and then retired to the camps of the Sixth Iowa and Forty-sixth Ohio, where he passed Sunday night. Trabue says he rode until 11 o'clock, trying to find a general officer to whom he could report for orders, and then sent an aid with escort, who rode all night without success. On Monday morning the brigade formed on the Purdy Road, Byrne's battery at Owl Creek Bridge. In a short time the brigade was moved by the flank to a point three-fourths of a mile east of Shiloh Church, and formed in line on the left and perpendicular to the road, Byrne's battery on the road at edge of a field (Duncan's), with Anderson" on the left and Bowen's brigade on the right. This position was held four hours and then the brigade, except the Fourth Kentucky and Fourth Alabama, moved to the right of the Duncan House and was then engaged for one hour more, when it fell back to the right of Shiloh Church. The Fourth Kentucky and Fourth Alabama were engaged in severe conflict north of Duncan Field, where they lost very heavily. Major Monroe, Fourth Kentuck}^ was killed here. At Shiloh Chureh the contest was continued two hours, when the brigade fell back to the forks of Bark and Pittsburg roads, where it remained as a rear guard Monday night, and on Tuesday retired to Mickey's, where it remained three days. Second Brigade. (Bowen's. ) From its bivouac Saturday night on the road toward Mickey's this brigade marched by the Bark and Eastern Corinth roads Sunday morn- ing to a position between the Peach Orchard and Locust Grove Creek, where it formed in battle line at 12 a o'clock under the personal direc- tion of General Johnston in the following order from left to right: Ninth Arkansas, Tenth Arkansas, Second Confederate, First Missouri, with Hudson's (Mississippi) and Watson's (Louisiana) batteries in the rear, its left 800 yards to rear and en echelon to Jackson's brigade. From this position it moved forward at 12.30 & p. in. and became engaged, in conjunction with Jackson, in an attack upon McArthur's brigade just east of the Peach Orchard. The attack was successful; the Union line was driven back and pursued to the northeast corner of the Peach Orchard. General Johnston, following close to the rear of this brigade, was killed at 2.30 p. m. Bowen was next engaged at Wicker Field with troops at the camp of the Twenty-eighth Illinois for two hours, when he was wounded and his brigade fell back to Seventy-first Ohio camp, where Colonel Martin took command and moved forward in time to join Breckinridge in his movement toward the river after the surrender of Prentiss. Martin says he halted within 300 or 400 yards of the river when the a 10 War Records, 618. & 10 War Records, 404. 88 batteries near Pittsburg and the gunboats opened on him, and being nearly night he fell back " to the first encampment the farthest from the river" and stayed all night. On Monday he was engaged under Breckinridge and fell back with him to the Bark road, where he bivouacked Monday as rear guard. No mention in the reports of either Hudson's or Watson's batteries. Third Brigade. (Stat ham' h.) This brigade formed the rear of the army and consisted of the Fif- teenth and Twenty-second Mississippi, the Nineteenth, Twentieth, Twenty-eighth, and Forty-fifth Tennessee, and Rutledge's Tennessee battery. It followed Bowen's brigade, and at noon was put in line south of Peach Orchard en echelon to and 800 yards in rear of Bowen. It moved forward into the Orchard, and at about 2.20 p. m. was put in position by Governor Harris and ordered to attack the Union forces at Bloody Pond. It moved to this attack in conjunction with Colonel Maney. After the surrender it joined Breckinridge in his movement east on the ridge. It is not known where it bivouacked Sunday night. On Monday it was doubtless engaged with Breckinridge, but there are no reports of brigades or regiments. Rutledge's battery was first in action on a hill in the rear of the brigade, then reported to General Ruggles and formed a part of his artillery line. On Monday it was near Shiloh Church. The Nine- teenth Tennessee went with Colonel Maney Sunday to Lick Creek and was with him in the charge at Peach Orchard at 2.30 p. m., and at the time of the surrender of Prentiss was with Colonel Looney, Thirty- eighth Tennessee, at the camp of the Third Iowa. The Twentieth Tennessee must have been engaged Monday with Breckinridge — its colonel, Battle, was captured in the vicinity of Lost Field by the Seventy-seventh Pennsylvania. UNATTACHED CAVALRY. Forrest's (Tennessee) regiment was guarding the fords of Lick Creek until about 2.30 p. m. Sunday, when it arrived on the field and sup- ported the left of the Twenty-sixth Alabama in the thick wood west of Peach Orchard. Clanton's (Alabama) regiment moved down the Bark road to Lick Creek, and then down the banks of the Tennessee River, guarding the right flank of the army all day Sunday. Wharton's Texas Rangers was on the left and at about 4.30 p. m. Sunday made a charge at Cavalry Field; was repulsed and Wharton wounded. It encamped on the left of the army and supported Ketchum's battery Monday, and in the afternoon charged the Union right and was repulsed. Adams's (Mississippi) cavalry was at ford of Lick Creek until 2.30 p. m. Sunday, then in reserve. "Louisiana Cavahy" is mentioned; not certain whether or not it was Scott's First Louisiana. 89 DESIGNATION OF BATTERIES MENTIONED HEREIN. Austin. ( See Trigg' s Alabama. ) Bain's Mississippi. Bankhead's Tennessee. Barrett's B, 1st Illinois. Bartlett's G, 1st Ohio. Behr's 6th Indiana. Bouton's I, 1st Illinois. BuePs. (See Thurber's 1st Missouri.) Burrows's 14th Ohio. Byrne's Mississippi. Cavender's. (See D, H, and K, 1st Mis- souri. ) Calvert's Arkansas. Cobb's Kentucky. Dresser's D, 2d Illinois. Gage's Alabama. Gibson's Field Battery. Girardey's Georgia. Harper's Mississippi. Helena. {See Calvert's Arkansas.) Hickenlooper's 5th Ohio. Hodgson's. {See Washington, Louisiana No. 5.) Hubbard's Arkansas. Hudson's Mississippi. Jefferson . ( See Harper' s. ) Ketchum's Alabama. Lyon's. {See Cobb's Kentucky.) Mann's C, 1st Missouri. Markgraf's 8th Ohio. McAllister's D, 1st Illinois. McClung's Tennessee. MendenhaU's H and M, 4th United States. Meyer's 13th Ohio. Miller's Tennessee. Morton. (See Behr's 6th Indiana.) Munch's 1st Minnesota. Pettus Flying Artillery. ( See Hudson's. ) Pillow's Flying Artillery. (See Miller's. ) Polk's Tennessee. Powell's F, 2d Illinois. Richardson's D, 1st Missouri. Robert's Arkansas. Robertson's Alabama or Florida. Ross's 2d Michigan. Rutledge's Tennessee. Schwartz's E, 2d Illinois. Shoup''s. (See Calvert's, Trigg's, and Hubbard's.) Silfversparre's H, 1st Illinois. Smith's Mississippi. Stanford's Mississippi. Stone's K, 1st Missouri. Swett's Mississippi. Taylor's. (See Barrett's 1st Illinois.) Ten-ill's H, 5th United States. Thompson's, 9th Indiana. Thurber's I, 1st Missouri. Timoney's. (See Dresser's 2d Illinois. ) Trigg's Arkansas. Vaiden's. (See Bain's.) Warren Light Artillery. 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[ 1 1 o • "3 pa •5.3.55 Hh- I^H h ! £ IIS! j H 33,Wfc< & > X ' o W jsj:^:^ a ^.d-cu o as a t ■ I? -- 5ir re i 5 - - - r !_' pt - - CC LT iC CO t^^t I>COl^ 95 ■*PO>i-i lO || IG »C0 CO it CO to ir-co CM tH do 3 'a % | .2 a S tB s « £ -2 ^ o o 22 oo O H ooo 222 ooo o H 2 2.2 222 ooo 'C *j -t^ COl~ t~ iOU5l> COOCN Sh£ Is 2 5 S'o §2 _, 2 cj 53 CO d O O §3 CNt-l 96 ^, s c s 7 co 7 ■v w s & H o H - ^ t3 w c H - h ■»~ H i i *' (SOI BUtlO 1 CM OJ 1 •uoiiob ut suno to to CM sauarrBg ] | - 1 - 1 "1 3 03 O •IBjox CO OXOlf i- i-H i-H CM ^ ■CtHO O) t- -r co oc ir~ 01 — Cl .0 ee 00 c» rHTjl 00 to O— I 01 H CO ■Suissi [\; cm OS^JI t» to — CO CG f-CO-* IO CO 00O 51 CO •papunoA\ -r to t 00 i~ -r r_ X Ol > r - 01 — ' CO l~ tpoOOOC CO i-H CO to as 01 OC100 01 paiira 1^ 00 00 o CO 1 ?] lC 1- CC HHHC4 1^ to Ol CM 00 ^HCO ~r 0) ■japumntuoo Xq pajaodgj su paSuSuo jaqinn^ ■juosaad {bioj, to os-i< t- OS 00 OJ OS OC X t> OS to ° iO 1 CO Of iOCC I> l>00 00 to :: co" Ol i.O TCO 00 to r^ oi OS OJ 'U9K | - •sjaoujo •U3H liO CO -^ r* 04 10 iO Cs O iO coo o OJ H rH o iO oo oto o 01 ON 1 ■SJ80OJ0 HMOl CM CO CO OS •uapi CO -f OSliO HMiCH l> CO to 3> OS •sjaoujo r-IOJ-*rH 00 -f r-i r-H •XI O "W"X : ci t — r* i~ COrtrtCI GO O IC 00 o 1 I-- 1 cm" I- Cl iC ifi CO O 00 CO T lO I- l> - 00. 1C cm" cm in 00 1^ MO 1^ >0 CO N to CO CM CO to CM •uaj\; OOiOOlOi 3a X X 33 5 1 of — CO CO cn" oo in-r CO 39 COrH CO CM ^0 •sjaoujo -r Ol UO OO CO CO CM CM on i-t CC'CDiC N M CO CO o CI CMlO CO CO -0 -r.ro OS -a c a a a o PRENTISS'S (SIXTH) DIVISION. (Return of Apr. 5.) Division staff ■a a •S 1 o 1 c * 1 -: -, 7 i r : 1 i a I X V ■i- : E- ) S % ^ a C e I r- a c : ■- C c * '? 7 a ; - e c a D c r- ) 1 It a c c # a C i 0. C P _^ E i c^ CN - a •c r t 'E P :- i c |£ *i- a e c c c a c 5 a « C c U z it - = a t Gi "o 1 E- 97 cn | ! 11 : CI tOTJIeotDID ar 1 °o ci 1 CN CI HrHHrtrt uc CI of 1O r. CO '-O CI ■ 01 CI - o iOCC 00 •'O •CO OS o> CO EG CO CI — — I- I- — * ■ Cl ■ so S cc CO M C) CI r-l en CO : X 1 to I OS 1 o 1 0> OO oo oc oc a a CI — CI CI CI ci 0-. ci ci ci rH of j| :| "J "^ 99 a — O CO X x "l r- "c 1 If. M 1 " : to U3 | oo IC i- a a ci :■ Cl ci Cl — X — -H — CO 10 Cl CO •N CI •c 05 1 ill 1-1 oo JN CI — -r ge oc 00 ce OODOOC r-l — CO oo CO CO so -t cc -r r" — 1 a 5 5 cq -e ci -r] 5 a - Eh UNASSIGNED ( 1 1 <>(<■. /" i. Infantry. 14th Wisconsin * ( note (7) C P * - : ic ;. >*- Arlillery. Markgraf's battery, 8th Ohio* Silfversparre's battery (11), 1st Illinois* X c p K £ - CI X - X * c c c" 1 > - 3 B ■J /. c = O — / s p 605a— 03- 98 3 = - O O ~s 5 r. cci JC - — -r II u 0) ■)S0[ sutiM "-* ! ' """ ! 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T >^ <_' S.^ 5 : 6 c c I Cy S — ] a/' - ? C *H 3 P. — §11111 < «>[ bUii;-| 1 CD : : ■uoypii ai sang ; ; 1 s.iiJ0}}Ba i 1 i i . <0 "3 s = "TOOx MMOMOt- -71 — iC CC iC CO CO t- CJ> Ol X) CM pH CD OOiOO -^ a- co i-- -f ll ■* CM II ■Snissiji OI CO CN ■ c. C-4 • CM co ic -f '" 35 co •popuno.vv X CM CO .C t~ 3 p CO CDTtHOf CO CO CO CO O II CI CM II ■pania CM ..O T CM CO ^< O CM t^ CO HO CM s 'J. n Ph •jopiiBuuuoo : A(( pOJJodO.I St? I co-r • CO Si • CO CM ' \ j CO rf t^ H i^ 35 co x iC i' -r co )U.IS.>.1>I [B;«X C-t-C-O^CN CO ~ — M N ThHf l^ l^ CO i£0 00 COt»<35-cp ■eoof CO QC t^ 1^- s t> co" (3 <£ X 01 i - co h- x^ co co cc 10 -r cm tc co •ilo IV - 35 LfC ifl r- piTt" ^£ 10 CO 35 CO CCClpI CO CO CO CM CO -H • X pH •* CI rt l~ CO CM pH n O 1 3 ■u.. k - -: •sj.miuo = OlOOOQDOCO CO CM 3 i-i z-. a ■[WKl ■ cot-i>.omcM = CM co" CO c ifr — r CM :£ CT. l> l^ iC CM 01" ? 1 CO 35 t^ ■Pl-TCO -c" cj •iiOK saaogjo lO !-( CO tH ■<*< CO :: — x r- 35 CO I- CO CO CO pi CC - co" t- t~ CO CO 35 35 COCO ■O CD t^ ^i to cm" *r-OH /.-Ctd 1~ 1- t~ t^ ■- cC 3. cm" iC TCIbCOO :i:ici-hpi — 35l^35p-l Ol M M CM CO - -!• 35 35 CO CM CM CM CM CC e o3 6 s c •_ .M'COOK'S (SECOND) division. (Return of Apr. 30.) Rousseau's (Fourth) Urigadt fith Tnrlinnn L z \ X u 1 \s '2 :: C ■J s. u : t 5a it ! i ft : j 1 I * ;p -. >. - pH : S S R 3 CM j|3 1 sn 3 8 I'd i "5 = 33 "0 £ 1- - c Eh "3 .05 A! '5 _c s. c • C 1 :'i if :s ■ 3 S : c : < ■~. 1 ; 1 c : 2 ;'S • = • > ! 8 ;s ?Ph :£ 1 1> : l> cy m 5 Eh .§> 03 s t a c C c I 3 i.J :; ci : : 4 - : ^ ; \ : ;c 5 J Si- ] s ' 35 . 1" CD - w pC 33 "3 H 100 }SO[ SUUf) 1 il CO | ■- II :| i— i ■iinii.ii: lit smi!i : < .11 • siuaw«a - 1 ::- ~\\ 1 1 " II „ X OC - .- Ol ■- r onog — — i- K c - ; ii « o * O! c? 1- f ?l (C OC H aj ■Suissij^ "3 -c in iC -.r :: — r- M M ec e M X C* p :: -^ z ^Jlr- iC O •papimow 1! x oc CO ! x oc — NIC £ 1- Oi- 00 /. 00 •pama 1 •J3puBramoo m .-o II O X C r. r. i ' - r £ r. T- a .{q pauodaj sb I SiCOiC ' K rHHC^ tj CO »c -^ CO •U8K ! ,* a s .- I j ?1 — »l "S •siaomo :- o> II 1 1 01 II 1 1 II ■r N - oc 1 ■M"*u- H Ph s ■a ■uaK i-i COC" r^ 1-1 II | | r-ii-H r CO •SJ30U)0 1 | II * 1 X iC c ■■c t^O DC 1— PHC TKI-- ■o 3 t- C£ OC to »1 t^ 'I^ox r ' ^ .£' ^ 1 1 CKt^C -^-c •-D o fq 1 CN j 1 ~. ?. » c ! — or- •-r ■- ~> 71 7 i^ •sj3Dtgo :- 1 | to - DQ a c z >§ T3 c o s -• £ — y •r. •— •* § n? o •B S 60 5 > ■< - Z. ~ 5 J 'E 8 O =3 { 'y 5 - "c 5 ^ pq S S £ £ 3 Eh T PC ; 5 a CJ a; o r - K OJ s to -^ c c Si s OJ 7 o a DO c J u -? 1Z! M o o s : - to # at Z | a 5 1 Z'l H s T jM > £££ ~z~ 7 E- •?, ? o- -? 101 N -\ -v ;i .- — a C A .S a n c c WWW •5 zc^ fe j= H Ei fe r o'S c c WW .2.2 33 Oi CO OS Oi i o u 3 3 mS 2 "g £ 5 ' S 0s 102 o u < •jsoj sun;) I ! | •uoijdb niMinn •s.iuoju'a | p 'I mo j, •* ^ "* 'Suissik 1 •papimo.vv t - of |' ■painx Ph •lapuiraroioD Xq pajiodaj si? paSraSua jaqtnn^ 1 O ni.i>.).nl ptjox 1 0. o a3 •U9H SJ30TJB0 a! o DQ •uaj\[ ■sjaoigo "3 c 'i»K •hjaoyjo 1 >> 3 *3 •imox iWK •sjaoujo •e a s a o c wood's (sixth) division— continued. Wagner's ( Twenty-first) Brigade * '. a : r ~ «"ci a e I - - r if > M ■2 -=■ — •4— • 93 % "C PQ Pi cC a n 6 at h c 'S c a ; > §31 & H i CD © •c a r-X .0 s - 1 01 ■-■■ 00 CO CO. - x ce ic t ,— .— -^ 9: I- — CO c of §8 01 CO -» ~ 0>. ofo~ rf t~ o x OJ CN 1© 5 «o tO CO X of X BO SO t- T* CM Of- 00 to CO o X ca i-i ce o) o fr-iH oo x«o r-fco" X s -t X v. co o X CBCC T* X co 0-1 — CO O) S Ol iH ii0 o UO -T Ol O iCiOX o r-~'*co of X X o " o CO CO l> X -f CO. CO r-~ao" rlCO i"o UOj - - - - - - - - - - " C c c : z t I c - j (= 5 c c a iC c £ 9 c '- b z J t- c < c s a > E < E- C < a a . o ! - E r- a C < , c < < C c (r 103 •S an 0> •^soisuno il i i 1 i l""* 1 ■* •W 1 : •uoijob in sung : i i i • to to oj " — itjoijea - - 1 j j j !" "Ihll o •U'K'X . . . D 35 N O to O 55 '• C i-i • 3 '• t~ to * ■ ,-( N H ■ lO r-1 •Sut^>!i\; :- ■ ■ ■*» d to to ■papuno^ ■ to ' 3H 01 to :■-. 35 ■panra ?*] ■ M t~ 35 ic to • i 3" 22 II ■japumnraoo Xq pa^oda.i su painsSua jaqran^ o ■ • • o ' • • E • • • 35 ■-; ■ ■ ■ to to to II 3 juasajd i«jox 1 jjj : 55 X a) M p - — - Eh ' ; i''K ! ; ! II : sjaoujo 1 : : : 1 1 So uaK ill sjaaigO 1 ::; Hi uaK 1 ! ; 1 ■siaoujO IN |: WOX III 1 r. X 35 — ' :C -r" naft III •sjaouto III GO 5 a 3 POLK'S (FIRST) COUPS. (Returns Mar. 31, Apr. 1, 3.) CLARK'S (FIRST) DIVISION. RusseWs {First) Brigade.* J aj a! a : zj zj Zj i t r. i 3 0) 0> 01 Sees 3 = C C " O dj 0! - m to - c >. 1 D . J: ,~ 0) a> ts a £ 1) m H .fc 1 | X Stewart's {Second) Brigade. Stanford's ( M ississippi) battery p i 3 1 a < — 0) C o - E £ E-i 10: ft S ft « >> 'JSO] suti; ( • ci -1 ; | '■0 f ■IKUl.li: HI SUM' 1 • -c te to - r, < •S0[.i,.ni:;i :- -< rt H ~ .2 g "IBJOX 31 -r r. : 1 e 1 - — 1 ■* i~ CO of •3uissi]\; — - 1 " M r ~ l •papimo^ '. f 3 5 - 3 CO m en •pamx r. -r 01 tH C~ 01 CO •japutiuiniOD Hq pajiodaj su paSuSua aeqranK 3 N : 3 : 1 3 tjT ; Hiasaid iujox I X " Ut} K TJ< o3 'SJ80IQO O O S3 ■nam -? ■SI3DUJ0 a: 3 -a •u.tk ■SJ80UJ0 00 H c Eh - WOi ! ■3 IN :: co" -r -r si" U9K - 1 CO Ol cc ■x. •sjsoiflo 1 N r. GO c o3 E 6 POLK'S (FIRST) CORPS— Continued. (Returns Mar. 31, Apr. 1, 3.) CHEATHAM'S (SECOND) DIVISION. Johnson's (First) Brigade. • a - - ; "z 1 E- 7 • ij J: 2 a; ■ r*> : « ! 08 [ — ■ '- - -- O EC * -: - - - u S3 — 33 •O 03 to pi ~. cq c a - 1 E- - a - "i ~ 1 i a - - 6} M -d a> -0 £ ~Z ■- e g <3 e i e c ■j Is I 0: r -- ! - PC 1 > - 7 > a < C a P c - c ;. -7 S-' ■ • s- • as ; ^ ! « : S ; .S : a Eh • VJ >>2 a- i- CO ^^ £<: S| "3 o« B .)UI(l •sidoiBO ■w -r re — ■ y: .c -r i- COt*>t~iHGQOiQrHGQ — OJ — — O o CO - ■Snissipi N cc c-i I'.ipuno.w CO X o 00 pains s lO l~ o oj u Ph •japuuraaiOD iCq p3;jodaj su :- o s -r ■jtiasaad [Bjox CO en r. of 3 01 1- OS ■U3K •sj9Digo 53 ■uok •sjeoygo 3 •nan • ►3 •siaouJO 5 'IB)0X 03 of TJ< •U3H ■saaoigo 1 a S a o o DO PL, Z c > a • PU s 63 £ as -- a _ « "": DC SJ r. •_- - ■ - - § = S C IS 5 £ c I 63 a g < 05 < > 5 . > - a 2 >> ■i 3 i. 5 > '5 i "a C F ■2 o a. 3 > r c > b = j T3 sS .SP 05 <*5 ■5" t S < cr J* 3 - c 1 7 7 > i ; p s is ■- 5 C. > c c 7 - 5 c i 1 1) - fl o o ~ 109 < t> =- - IIIhs s ?< ^- no ■|sd| Bang ■UOpOW UI sun;> -;;u.)jn I ■p»K>x •Suissi]\; -* T t © 'O X ^oioiOh ri c\ mm n as -r ~h ijo as rH :o -r --2 O •pepunow CO — 'O 1 i- -T -" I/". lH CMiH — >"MHM XiOC CO •jopumnino.) Xq pajjodoj si; poSuSud J.iquuix rS i— i e e h •« o « w 3 o ? 9 •4 •^uasaid [ujoj, ire m co rH cc r^ rHO CC X •U3H r-l OJ 1— CM C-l C-l •SJ301BO 1OCO1O 71 lOlH •siaomo r^x?) as r~ i> -n* co r-lCO rH cc-r -r -r as cc X' 0-1 C-l O bjooiyo •l«H>X •SJ301BO X -r M — XMO CI i— CI rH r-l to T3X h ci cc cc a. cc i~ »cc rn ist rr co os rp CM r~ CI CO CO j Cs CO oTcoco r* ccs't" j cc"© CO — O CO CI 1C C] i-l CC CMCO t- oo.io'co' CO r-l CCCO CO lOH O t-o o lis 1^ 35 T OS ©to no OX H l> 2 a §| tO;0 r" C A a. << Z g S© adec l^ cc io en COI- lO X. CI l- o o ., Ma.]., 14. Bristol, Hiram W.. Capt., 29. Br 1 stow, Benjamin II., Lieut. Col., 27. Brotzmann, Edward, Lieut., 27. Bruce, Sanders D., Col., 30, 41, 03. Bruce's (22d) Brigade, 30, 41, G3, 101. Brunei-, , Lieut., 39. Brush, Daniel H., Capt., 24. Auckland, Ralph P., Col., 13,28,39,58,85. Buckland's (4th) Brigade, 9,13,14,16,19,28,39, 65,66,58,71,77,84,95, Buckley, Harvey M., Col., 29. Buckner, John A., Capt., 42. Bnell, Don Carlos, Maj. Gen., 7, 10.12,29,40,45,61. Buford, Louis M., Lieut., 41. Bulkier, Henry D., Capt., 43. Burrows, Jerome B., Capt., 24. Burrows's Battery. (See Ohio Troops.) Burtwell, John R. B., Lieut., 44. Bush, T. J., Lieut., 40. Basse, Gustav A., Capt., 25. Byrne, Edward P., Capt., 36. Byrne's Battery. (See Mississippi Troops.) Cadlc, (!., jr., Adjt., 37. Caldwell, Robert P., Maj., 31. Caldwell, Samuel, Lieut., 37. Calvert, J. !i., Capt., 35. Calvert's Battery. (See Arkansas Troops.) Cam, William, Lieut. Col., 27. Campbell, Alexander W., Col., 32. Campbell, John, 42. Campbell, John A., Lieut., 40. Cnnfield, Herman, Lieut. Col., 28. L'antrell, Robert, Maj., 35. Carmlchael, Eagleton, Capt., 24. Carpenter, Stephen D., Maj., 29.- Cnrpenter, W. M., Lieut., 40. Cavender, J. N., Maj., 26. Cavender's Artillery Battalion. (See Batteries D, H and K, 1st Mo.) Cayce, S. W., Col., 34. Chadiek, William D., Lieut. Col,, 34. Chaffee, o. P., Maj., 43. Chalmers, James R., Brig. Gen. 19, 20, 21, 34, 44, 57, CO, 74. Chalmers's Brigade, 12,13.14, 17,29,30,34,44,49 53, 51, 57, 59, CO, 67, 72, 73, 74, 75, 106 Chambers, Alexander, Col., 29, 60. Champneys, J. T., Capt., 42. Chandler, John G., Capt., 40. Cheatham, B. P., Maj. G en., 18, 32, 42, 70, 79, 82, 83, 84, 85. Cheatham's (2d) Division, 12, Is. 82, 42, 66, 69, 72, 77. 79, 83, 86, 104. 1st Brigade. See Johnson's. 2d Brigade. See Stephens's. Chetlain, Augustus L., Lieut. Col., 25. Chlsolm, A. R., Lieut., 42, 71. Church, S., Lieut., 11. Clack, Franklin H., Maj., 33. Claiborne, John, Maj., 43. Clanton, James H., Col., 34. Clanton's Cavalry. (See Alabama Troops.) Clare, William, Capt., 44. Clark, Charles, Brig. Gen., 14, 31, 42, 79. Clark's (1st) Division, 31, 42, 103. 1st Brigade. See Russell's. 2d Brigade, '•'ee Stewart's. Clark, Fred. A., (apt, 41. Clarkson, A. W., Capt., 44. Clay, Henry, ('apt. 40. Cleburne. P. R., Brig. Gen., 21,35,44,48,58,71,76. Cleburne's (2d) Brigade, 12, 13, 14, 16, 20, 21, 35, 44, 48, 57, 58, 67, 69, 71, 72, 86, 107. Clifton, James M., Maj., 36. Clifton's Battalion. (See Alabama Troops.) Cobb, Robert, Capt., 36. Cobb's Battery. (See Kentucky Troops.) Cobb, O. O., Lieut., 43. Coekerill, Joseph R., Col., 28, 58. Coleman, D. C, Lieut., 38. Coleman, J. H.. Capt., 44. Coltart, J. G., Lieut, Col., 34. Compton, B. S., Col., 25. Confederate Regular Regiments: 2d Inf., 36, 87, 88, 108. 3d Inf., 35, 70, 107. Cook, 31. K., Lieut., 38. Cooke, G. B., Capt., 43. Cooper, Wickliffe. Lieut., 41. Corn. S. T., Lieut., 41. Cox, J. J., Capt., 33. Craft. Henry, Capt., 44. Crews, James W'.. Lieut. Col., 36. Crews's Battalion. {See Tennessee Troops.) Crittenden, Thomas L., Brig. Gen., 22, 30, 41, 64. Crittenden's (5th) Division, 21, 22, 30, 41, 46, 48, 49, 62, 64, 101, 102. 11th Brigade. See Boyle's. 14th Brigade. See VV. S. Smith's. Crittenden, Thomas T., Col., 29. Crocker, Marcellus M., Col., 24, 46. Crosley, George W., Lieut., 26, 54. Cross, Joseph D., 42. Cruft, Charles, Col., 27, (rump, R. S., Capt., 44. Culluni, George W., Brig. Gen., 37. Cummlngs, David H., Col., 36. (Jammings, E. H., Capt., 42. Cnmmlngs, J. B., Capt., 44. (utts, Richard D., Col., 37. Darden, Put, Lieut., 35. Darragh, Thomas B., 44. Davidson, William M., Lieut., 43. Davies, S. W'., Lieut., 40. 115 Davis, John A., Col., 27. Dean, John M., Lieut. Col., 35, 49, 70. Deas, Z. I'., Col., 19, 34, 73. De Haas, Wills, Lieut. Col., 28. Dickey, Cyrus E., Lieut., 38. Dickey, T. Lyle, Col., 28. Dillon, William J., Capt, 24. Dodge, Joseph 15.. Lieut. Col., 29. Donnelly, George K., Capt., 39. Dorchester, W. 11., Lieut.. 38. Doug-lass, Henry L., Col., 32. Dresser's Battery. (See D, 2d 111.) .. Duhoise, J. V. D., Col.. 37. Duhroca, E. M., Capt., 33. Dunlop, Isaac L., Col., 30. Dunn, David M., Lieut. Col.. 29. Katun. Samuel, Maj., 24. Edgington, Samuel It., Capt., 25. Ellis, Edward E. W., Lieut. Col.. 27. Ellis, Towson, Lieut., 43. Engelmann, Adolpli, Lieut. Col.. 24. Enyart, David A., Col., 30. Fagan, James F., Col., 33. Fant, Albert E., Col., 34. Farden, James A., Lieut. Col., 27. Farrar, Fred H., jr.. Maj.. 34. Farris, John T.« Lieut., 41. Farris. Robert C, Lieut. Col.. 34. Fearing. B. D., Maj., 28. Feild. Hume H.. Maj., 32. Ferguson, John. Col., 31. Ferguson, S. W., Lieut. Col., 42. Ferrell, Charles M., Lieut. Col., 24. Ferry, Albert, Capt., 12. Fisher, Cyrus W., Maj., 57. Fisher, Horace N., 40. Fitch, John A.. Lieut., 28. Fitzhugh, C. L., Lieut., 40. Florida Troops: Artillery— Robertson's (Ala. and Fla.) Battery, 34, 53. 73, 74. Infantry— 1st Battalion. 53, 77, 78, 105. Foard, A. J., Surg., 43. Foote, A. H., Commodore, 7. Force, Manning F., Lieut. Col., 26. Fiiirest. X. B., Col., 36. Forrest's Cavalry. (See Tennessee Troops.) luster. Frank, 44. Foster. John W., Maj., 27. Fox. F. W., Capt,, 39. Freeman, Henry ('., Lieut., 37. Freeman, Thomas J.. Col., 31. Frisbie, Orton, Capt.. 24. Fry. James B., Col., 40. Hilton. Robert A., Lieut. Col., 28. Fyffe. James P., Col., 30. <;age. Charles P.. Capt., 34. Gage's Battery. (See xVlabama Troops.) Gamble, C. B., Sun;.. 43. Gardner, Frank, Lieut. Col., 43. Garfield, James A., Brig. Gen., 31, 41. Garfield's (20th) Brigade, 31, 41, 101. Earner, George G., Maj., 43. t;ass. Isaac, Lieut. Col., 41. (lay lord, Charles D., Lieut., 40. Geddes, James L., Col., 25. Georgia Troops: Artillery— Batteries: Girardey's, 14, 34, 53, 75, 76, 106. Cavalry— Companies: Avery's, 12, 35, 69, 107. Gibson, Randall L., Col., 21, 33, 43, 59, 72, 77. Gibson's (1st) Brigade, 12, 16, 17, 18, 21, 33, 43, 48, 49, 55, 59, 76, 77, 83, 105. Glbsou's Battery, 8. Gibson, William H., Col.. 30, 40, 61. Gibson's (6th) Brigade, 30, 40, 65, 66, 99. Gillreath, Montgomery, Lieut. Col., 36. Gilman, J. H., Capt.. 40. Gilmer, J. F., Col., 41. Girardey, Isadore P., Capt., 34,. Girardey's Battery. (Sec Georgia Troops. ) Gladden, Adley H., Brig. Gen., 13, 16, 34, 43, 60, 73. Gladden's (1st) Brigade. 12. 13, 16, 17, 19, 20. 34, 43, 53, 55, 59, 60, 67, 72, 73, 74, 105. Gober, Daniel, Maj., 33. Goldsmith, Middleton, Surg., 41. Goodall, David L., Lieut. Col., 35. Goodbrake, Christopher, Surg., 37. Goran, Daniel <'., Col., 35. Grant, V. S., Maj. Gen., 7, 10, 11, 15, 24, 37, 45, 58, 62. (■raves, W. Preston, 40. Gray, Samuel, Capt* 44. Grayson, A. D., Lieut. CI., 32, 82. Gregg, Clark S., Lieut., 41. Green, X., jr., Lieut., 42. Grider, Benjamin ( '., Col., 30. Grigsby, Lewis B., Col., 31. Grose, William, Col., 30. Gross, S. W.. Surg., 40. Gwin, William, Lieut., 9. Hackett, R. E., Lieut., 41. Haines, T. J.. Maj., 37, Hall. Aslier B.. Lieut. 37. Hall, Cyrus, Col.. 27. Hall. William, Lieut. Col., 24. Halleck, Henry W., Maj. Gen., 7, 10, 11, 23,37, ill. Hallomiuist, J. II., Maj , 43. Hammond, J. H., Capt., 39. Hanson. Charles S.. Lieut. Col., 30. Hardcastle, A. B., Maj., 12, 13, 35, 59, 68. Hardee, William J.. Maj. Gen., 11, is, 19,20,21,22, 35, 44, 66, 67, 68, 72, 78, 81, 82. Hardee's (3d: Corps, 11,12.35, 14, 58,66,67,68,71, 73.107, llu. 1st Brigade, s, , Shaver's. 2d Brigade. See Cleburne's. 3d Brigade. See Wood's. Hare, Abraham H., Col., 24, 37, 46. Hares (1st) Brigade, 15,24,37,45,46,54,70,90. Harker, Charles G.*, Col., 31. Harper, W. A., (apt., 35. Harper, William L., Capt., 25. Harper's Battery (See Mississippi Troops.) Harris, Isham G., Governor, 41, 67, 88. Harris, John W., Lieut. Col., 35. Harrison, Thomas J., Col., 30. Hartshorn, Dana W., Surg., 39. Harvey, R, F., Maj., 35. Harvey, William II., Capt., 24. Hawkins, Joseph G., Lieut. Col., 30. Hawkins, J. P., Capt , 37. Hawkins, Pierce B., Col., 30. 116 Hawthorne, Alexander T., Col., 85. Hiiyclen, l». .11.. Maj., 41. Hayes, Charles s.. Maj., 26. Haynes, W. H., Maj., 42. Haynie, Isham N., Col., 24, Hazen, William B., Col., 22,30,40. Hazen's (l'.Hin Brigade, 22,30,40,63,100. Hear.!, S. S., Col., 43. Hearn, John P., Maj., 32. Henderson, Thomas A., 42. Henry, T. P., Capt., 42. Hereford, F. M., Surg., 43. Herron, David 1-., Lieut. Col., 32. Hewitt, Hi in v s., Surg., 37. Hickenlooper, A., Capt., 29. Hickenlooper's Battery. (See Fifth Ohio.) Hicks, Stephen (i., Col., 27. Hlldebrand, Jesse, Col., 28,39,57,71. Hildebrand's (3d) Brigade, 10, 13, 14, 16,28,39, 47,55,57,71,95. Hill, Benjamin J., Col., 35. Hill, Munson K., Col., 32. Hillyer, W. S., ('apt., 37. Hindmnn, Thomas C, Brig. Gen., 16, 35, 67, 70, 72, 82. Hindman's Division, 18,49. Hinds, Howell, Maj., 42. Bines, Cyras C, Col , 31. Hitt, Joseph E., Lieut., 37. Hoblitzell, W. T., Lieut., 40. Hobson, Edward H., Col., 30. Hodge, B. L., Col., 33. Hodgson, W. Irving, Capt., 33. Hodgson's Battery (No. 5), Washington Artil- lery. (See Louisiana Troops.) Hollingsworth, James M., Lieut. Col., 33. Hooe, John, 44. Hooe, Key M., Capt., 43. Horton, Charles ('., Lieut., 40. Hotaling, John H., ('apt., 25. Hone, S. B., 43. Hubbard, George T.. Capt., 35. Hubbard's Battery. (See Arkansas Troops.) Hudson, Alfred ('., Capt., 36. Hudson's Battery. (See Mississippi Troops.) Huger, D. E., Capt.. 43. Hughes, H. Q.. Lieut., 41. Hugnnin, Janus B., ('apt., 25. Hunt, Frank 15.. Lieut., 41. Hunt, Thomas H., Col., 36. Hunter, Samuel E., Lieut. Col., 33. Hurlbut, Stephen A., Brig. Gen., 11,18,26,38,53,62. Hurlbufs (4th) Division, 8, 10, 11, 15, 17, 19, 21, 26, 38,45,49,53,93,94,98; 1st Brigade: See Wil- liam's: 2d Brigade: See Veatch's; 3d Bri- gade: See Lauman's. Hynes, Andrus B., Lieut. Col., 36. Illinois Troops: Artillery— Batteries: A 1st i Wil]ard's),15, 25, 48. 50, 92; B 1st (Taylor's), L3, 28, -">4. 55, 71, SI, 95, D 1st (McAllister si. 15, 16, 24, 45, 47, 8(1, 82,91; Elst(Waterhouse's), it. 16,28,55,68, 71, 76, 77, 80, 83, 95; II 1st (Silfversparre's), 29, 57, 61, 97; I 1st (Bouton s), 29, 57, 61, 97; B 2d (Siege Guns), 19, 29, 48, 49, 01, 97; D 2d (Dresser's), 15. 16, 24, 45, 46, 91: E 2d (Schwartz's), 15, 16, 21, 24, 45, 47, 83, 84, 91; F 2d (Powell's) 29, 61, 97. Illinois Troops— Continued. Cavalry— /»''.-;//»' ids: 4th, 16, 24, 28, 91, 95; 11th, 26, 29, 59, 93, 97. Cavalry— Companies: A 2d, 25, 92; B 2d, 25, 92; ( jriniehacl's. 24, 91; Stewart's, 24, 91; Thielemann's, 28,95. Infantry— Regiments: 7th. 15, 25, 48,50, 51, 71, 91; 8tli, 21. 46, 90; 9th. 15, 20,26, 49, 50,91; 11th. 17, 21, 16, 47. 58, 9ii: 12th. 15, 25, 49, 50, 91; 14th. 27, ■">), 55, 91: 15th, 21, 'J7. 54, •V.. '.'I; 17th, 24, 47, 57, 90; 18th. 24. 16, 90; 20th, 17. 24, 46, 47. v(i; 28th, 211, 26 E 71. 93; 29th, 21. 47. 90; 32d, 26, 53, 54, 93: 34th, 29. 65, 99; 40th, 27. 56, 95; 41st. 26, 53. i.'iil.Ji. 17, 90; 45th, 24, 46, 47, 90; 46th, 27, 54, 55, 94; 4sth. 21. 46, 47, 90: 49th, 24, 17. 57. '.xi: 50th, 15. 25, 50, 91; 52d. 15,25, 50, 91: 55th, 20,27,56, 57, 75, 95; 57th. 15, 25, 50, 51, 91; 58th, 15. 19, 25, 48. 50, 51, 91: (list. 28, 60, 96. Indiana Troops: Artillery — Batteries: 6th (Morton's) (Belir-i, 28, 50; mil (Thompson's), 20, 50, 51, 93. Infantry— Regiments: 0th, 29, 65, 99; 9th. 30, 0:;, 100; 11th, 20. 5l>, 92; 15th. 31, 102: 23d, 26, 52, 93: 24th. 24, 52; 25th, 27, 51. 94; 29th, 29, 05. 99; 30th, 29. 65. 99: 31st. 27. 55, 94; 32d. 30. 66, 99; 36th, 19. 30, 62, 63, 100; 39th, 30, 00. 99; tOth, 31. 102; 44th, 27. 56, 94; 57th. 31, 00. 102. Inge, W. M., Maj., 12. Ing< i- nil, Eohert 6., Col., 29. Iowa Troops: Infantrj — Regiments: 2d, 19, 21, 25,48,49,63,91; 3d, 20, 26, 53, 54, 78. 93; 6th, 17, 20, 27, 53, 50, 86, 95; 7th. 19, 25, 48, 49, 91; 8th, 1".. 19, 21. 19, 5o. 51, 91: 11th. 17, 24, 46, 47, 90; 12th. 19, 20, 25. 48, 19. 7s. 91; 13th, 24. 40. 5). 90; 14th, 19, 25. is, J9, 50. 70. 74. 91; loth. 29, 58, 00. 90.. Ill: Kith. 29, 58, 00, 90, 111. Irvrin. B. .1. !».. Asst. Surg.. 40. Irwin, J. W., Capt., 67. Jack, Thomas SI., Lieut., 41. Jackson. Isaac M., Lieut.. 42. Jackson. John K.. Bri'.-. Gen., 14, 19, 20, 34. 41. 76. Jackson's (3d) Brigade, 12, 14, 10. 17, 19, 20, 21, 34, 4), 50, 51. 67, 72, 73, 75, 87, 106. James. John W., Lieut., 43. Jenkins, Thomas F., ('apt., 33. Jenkins's Battalion Cavalry. (See Alabama Troops.) Jenney. William I,. B,, Lieut., 37. Jewett. E. F., 40. Johnson. Amory K., Col., 26. Johnson, Bushrod B., Brig. Gen., 14, 16,42,47. 58, 83,84. Johnson's 1-1 1 Brigade, 14. 10, 21, 32, 43. 47, 58, 71, 77. 79. so. 83, 104. Johnson, James !•"., Maj., 26. Johnston. Albert Sidney. Gen., 7. 11, 12, 16. 17 is 20, 31. 41, 07. os, 72, 74. 75. 81, 85, 87. Johnston. George is.. Maj.. 34. Johnston, L. P., Maj., 43. Johnston. William P., Col., 18. Jones. Charles, Lieut. Col., 33. Jones. Erastus S.. Lieut., 37. Jones, Frederick t'., Lieut. Col., 30. 117 Jones Frank J., Lieut., 41. Jones, John J., Lieut. Col., 27. Jones, Timothy B., Lieut. Col., 32. Jordan, Thomas, Col., 42. Jordan, William McR., Lieut., 43. Kearney. William, Lieut., 44. Keenan, A. G., Surg., 88. Kelley, Louis D., Capt., 27. Kelley, Jolin H., Maj., 35. Kelton, J. C, Capt.. 37. Kemlriek, J. Hills. Capt., 10. Kennard, G. W., Capt.. 37. Kent, Adolph, Adjt.,43. Kentucky Troops (Confederate): Artillery— Batteries: Cobb's (Lyon's), 17,36,45, 47, 86, 108; Trabue's, 109. Cavalry — Companies: Morgan's, 36, 86, 108; Thompson's, 36, 86, 108. Infantry— Regiments: Sd, 36, 86, 108; 4th, 36, 86, 87, 108; 5th, 30, 86, 87, 108; 6th, 36, 8G, 87, 108; 7th, 32, 84, 85, 104. Kentucky Troops (Union) : Infantry— Regiments: 1st, 30, 63, 101; 2d, 30, 63, 101; 5th, 29, 6"), 99; 6th, 30, 63, 100; 9th, 30, 64, 101; 11th, 30, 64. 101; 13th, 30, 64, 101; 17th, 27, 55, 94; 20th, 30, 63, 101; 24th, 31, 102; 25th, 27, 55, 94: 26th, 30, 64, 65, 101. Ketchuin, William H., Capt,, 33. Ketchum's Battery. {See Alabama Troops.) Ketchum, W. Scott. Brig. Gen., 37. Kimherly, Robert L., Lieut., 40. King, Benjamin, Lieut., 43. King, Ezra, Lieut., 24. King, John II., Maj.,29. Kinney, Peter, Col., 2G. Kirk. Edward W., Col., 29, 40. 65, 66. Kirk's (5th) Brigade. 21, 29, 40, 65, 99. Knefler, Frederick, Capt., 38. Kossak, William, Lieut.. 37. 39. Lagow, C. B., Capt., 37. Laing, Cuthbert W., Lieut., 27. Lanier, John s., Lieut.. 42. Lannom, W. D., Lieut. Col., 32. Larlson, Thomas J., Capt., 25. Lauman, Jacob D., Brig. Gen., 17, 27, 39, 55. Lauman's (3d ) Brigade, 15, 16, 17, 27, 39, 53, 55, 94. Lawrence, (i. W., Surg., 44. Lea, Benjamin J., Col., 34. Lee, R. B., Col., 42. Leggett, M. D., Col., 26. Lennard, George W., Capt., 41. Levanway, Charles H., Maj., 29, 66. Lewis, Joseph II.. Col.. 36. Lexington, U. S. ship, 19. L'Hommedieu, Samuel, Asst Surg., 39. Liggett, II. T., Lieut.. 41. Lindsay, A. J., Col., 20, 32. Lindsay's Cavalry. (See Mississippi Troops.) Lockett, S. H., Capt.. 43. Lofland, Charles, 86. Logan, John, Col., 26. Looniis, Charles, Adjt., 39. Loomis, John 0;.. Col., 34. Looney, Robert I'., Col., 22,33,49,78,88. Louisiana Troops: Artillery— Batteries: Watson's. 36,87,108; Wash- ington So. 5 (Hodgson's), 33,77,78,82,105. Louisiana Troops — Continued. Cavalry— Scott's, 88. Infantry— Regiments: 1st, 34, 73,74,105: 4th, 33, 76, 77, 81, 105; 11th, 31, 77, 78, 80, 82, 86, 103; 13th, 33, 76, 105; 16th, 33, 78, 105; 17th. 33, 77, 78, 80,83, 105; 18th, 8, 18, 33, 78, 105; 19th, 18, 33, 76, 77, 79, 105; 20th, 33, 77, 78, 105; Crescent. 18, 33, 78, 79, 105; Orleans Guard, 33, 78, 105; Confederate Guards Response, 33, 77, 105. Love, Samuel T.. Maj., 35. Lyles, William D.. Surg., 42. Lynch. William F., Col., 25. Lyon's Battery. ( See Cobb's ( Ky. ) Battery.) Lytic, Ephraim F., Lieut. Col., 36. McAllister, Edward, Capt., 24. McAllister's Battery. (See " D," 1st 111.) lIi-Arthur. John, Brig. Gen., 17, 18, 25, 3s. 49, 50. McArthur's (2d) Brigade, 14, 15, 17. 19, 25,38,48, 49, 75, 91. MeArdle, W. H., Capt., 12. McClellan, George B.. Maj. Gen., 7, 10, 11. McClernand, John A., Maj. Gen., 10, 11, 15, 18, 19, 24, 37, 47, 55. 58. McClemand's (1st) Division, 10, 11, 16, 17. 18. 19, 21, 23, 37, 45, 55, 90, 98. 1st Brigade. See Hare's. 2d Brigade. See Marsh's. 3d Brigade. See Raith's. McClung, Hngh L., 36. McClung's Lattery. I See Tennessee Troops.) McClung, Linus A., Lieut., 44. McClure, James E., 42. McCook, Alexander McD., Brig. Gen., 22, 29, 10, 65. McCook's (2d) Division, 21, 22, 29, 40, 54, 62, 65, 99, 100, 102. 4th Brigade. Set Rousseau's. 5th Brigade. See Kirk's. 6th Brigade. S< e i lilison's. McCook, Daniel. Capt., 40. McCord, William 1).. Lieut. Col., 26. McCoy, James C. Lieut., 39. McCullough, William. Lieut. Col., 24. McDaniel, Coleman A., Col., 35. McDonell, Thaddeus A., Maj., 33. McDowell, John A., Col., 14, 15, 27, 39, 54, 55, 56, 78. McDowell's (1st) Brigade, 9, 14, 16, 27, 39, 50, 54, 56, 58, 77,95. McGinnis, George F., Col., 20. McHenry, John II., jr., Col., 27. Mclvee, Robert W., 44. McKibben, J. C, Col., 37. McKoin. James L., Col., 35. McLean, N. 11.. Capt., 37. McMichael, William, Capt., 38. McNairy, F. H.. (apt., 12. McNaughton, S. S., Lieut., 39. McS'eely, James A., Maj., 32. McPherson, James B., Col., 9, 37. Madison, Kelly, Capt., 29. Malmborg, Oscar. Lieut. Col., 27. Maney, George, Col., 21, 32, S4, 8.5, ,87, 88. Mangum, Thomas H., Maj., 36. Mann's Battery. I N eC, 1 5t Mo. | Markgraf, Louis, Capt., 29, 61. v Markgral's Battery, i See 8th Ohio.) Marks, Samuel F., Col., 31. 118 M.irmadukc. J. S.. Col.. 35. Harrast, John ('.. Lieut. Col., 34. Marsh, C. Carroll. Col., 24, 37. Marsh's (2d | Brigade, L5, 21, 24, 87, 45, 40, 47, 54, 69, 90. Martin, James T., Maj., 35. Martin, John ('., Lieut., 41. Martin. John D.. C<>1., 20, 21, 36, 87. Mason. Rodney, Col., 27. Maston, Charles .!.. 14. Maxwell, Cicero, Lieut. Col., 31. Mayfield, manning, Maj., 24. Mayson, Hamilton. Lieut. Col., 34. Mendenhall, John, Capt., 30. Mendenhall's Battery, i Set 1-1 and M. 4th U. S. i Merrick. Thomas 1)., Col., 36. Mersy, August, Col., 25. Meylert, A. P., Surg., 40. Michigan Troops: Artillery— Batteries: 2d (Ross), 15, 19, 27, 53,79, 94. Infantry— Regiments: 12th, 28, 59,60,96; 13th, 31, 101; loth, 29, 60, 65, 97, 111. Miehler, Nathaniel, Capt., 39. Miller, , Capt., 35. Miller's Battery, or Pillow's Flying Artillery. {See Tennessee Troops. | Miller, Madison, Col., 28, 39, 58, 60. Miller's (2d) Brigade, 13, 28, 39, 59, 60, 96. Minnesota Troops: Artillery— Battery: 1st (Munch), 13, 29, 59, 70, 76, 96. Mississippi, Army of (Confederate), 11, 12, 23, 31, 41, 66. 1st Corps. See Polk's. 2d Corps. See Bragg's. 3d Corps. See Hardee's. Reserve Corps. See Breckinridge's. Mississippi, Department of (Union). 9, 37. Mississippi Troops: Artillery— Batteries: Balne's, 33, 76, 105; Byrne's, 36, 86, 87. 108; Harper's. 35, 53, 68, 69,70,107; Hudson's, 36,87,88,108; Smith's, 32,82,85, 104; Stanford's. 16, 32, 80, 81, 82, 103; Swell's, 16, 35, 70, 81, 107. Cavalry— Regiments: Adam's. 12, 36, 88, 109; Lindsay's (1st), 19, 32, 53, 79, 104. Cavalry— Battalion: Brewer's (Ala. and Mi--. 12, 32, 50, 80, 104. Infantry— Battalions: 3d, 12, 13,35, 68, 09, 107. Infantry— Regiments: 5th, 34, 74, 100; Oth, 14, 20, 35, 77, 80, 107; 7th, 34, 74, 106; Oth, 19, 34, 49, 74, 75, 100; 10th, 34, 74, 100; loth, 30, 88, 109; 22d, 30. 88, 109; Blythe's, 32, 83, 84, 104. Missouri, Department of, 7, 9, 62. Missouri Troops (Confederate : Infantry— Regiments: 1st. 30, 74, 79, S7. 108. Missouri Troops (Union): Artillery— Batteries: 1st Regiment, C (Mann's), 15, 27, 53, 94; D (Richardson's), 15, 25, 48, 92; H (Welker's), 15, 25, 48, 92; 1 (Thurber's or Buel's), 26, 51, 93; K (Stone's), 15, 19, 25, 48, 49, 50, 92. Infantry— Regiments: 8th, 26,52, 92; 13th, 15,17, 19, 25, 49, 50, 56, 86, 91; 14th, 15, 19, 25, 49. 50, 52, 80, 91; 18th, 28, 58, 60, 90; 21st, 13, 28, 69, 60, 96; 23d, 29, 58, 59, 96, 111; 25th, 13, 28 59, 96. Monroe, Thomas B., jr.. Maj.. 87. Moody. Uldeon ('.. Col.,30. n e. David. Col.. 13. 28, 59, 60. Moore. I). I,.. Capt.. 42. Moore, Edwin, Lieut.. 39. Moore, James, Maj., 32. Moore, John <'., Col., 34, 73. Moore, W. E., Maj., 41. Morgan, Chariton, 1 1. Morgan, John H., Capt., 36. Morgan'- Cavalry. {See Kentucky Troops, Con- federate.) Morgan, William II.. Lieut. Col., 27. Morton, C. A., Capt.. 39. Morton. Quln, Col., 29. Morton. Thomas. Col., 25, 50. Mouton, Alfred, Col., 33. Munch. Emll, Capt., 29, Munch's Battery, i See Minnesota Troops.) Mumfiiid, E. W., Dr., 41. Murray, Robert, Surg., 40. Musser, Francis IS., Surg., 41. Myers, John I!., Capt.. 27. Myers's Battery, i See Ohio Troops.) Hygatt, George s.. Lieut. Col., 40. Nale, John H., Capt.. 26. Nebraska Troops. Infantry— Regiments: 1st, 20,52,93. Neely. Unfits P., Col.. 32. Nelll, James F., Lieut. Col.. 35. Nelson, William, Brig. Gen., 15,21,30,40,45,49,62. Nelson's (4th) Division, 15, 19, 21, 22, 30, 49, 62, 63, 64,100,102. 10th Brigade. See Ammen's. 19th Brigade. See Hazen's. 22d Brigade. See Bruce's. N'evins, Garrett, Maj., 24. Vispel. George L., Lieut., 21,24. Nott, , Sergt. Maj., 43. Nott, J. ('., Surg.. 43. O'Hara. Theodore. Capt., 41. Ohio, Army of the. 11, 12, L\19. 21, 23, 29, 40, 49, 61, 62,99-102. 2d Division. See McCook's. 4th Division. See Nelson's. 5th Division. See Crittenden. 0th Division. See Wood's. Ohio, Department of. 7,10,62. Ohio Troops. Artillery— Batteries: oth .. Maj., 44. Polk, A. H., Lieut,. 42. Polk, Leonidas, Maj. Gen., 11,16,18,19,20, 21,31, 42, 60, 72, 80, S3. Polk's (1st) Corps, 11, 12, 18, 31, 42, 47, 66, 71, 79, 80, 103,104,110. 1st Division. See Clark's. 2d Division. See Cheatham's. Polk. Marshall T., Capt., 32,84. Polk's Battery. (See Tennessee Troops.) Pond, Preston, jr., Col., 14,19,21,33,43,47,54. Pond's (3d) Brigade, 12,14,18,20,21,22.33,43,46, 47. 49, 50, 54, 55, 58, 72, 76, 77, 78, 105. Poole, W. G.. Capt.. 33. Porter. James D., Maj., 42. Porter, W. M., Lieut., 42. Porter, W. W., Capt., 42. Powell, James, Lieut.. 25. Powell, James E., Maj., 13,59. Powell, John W., Capt., 29,61. Powell's Battery. (See F, 2d 111.) Pratt, Isaac V., Lieut. Col., 28,74. Prentiss, Benjamin 31., Brig. Gen., 10,11,13, 16, 17 18, 19, 22, 28, 39, 58, 59, 60, 61, 68, 72, 73, 77. Prentiss s (6th) Division, 10, 11, 15, 16, IS, 19, 22, 28 39, 45, 51, 53, 58, 59, 60, 75, 77, 96, 97, 98. 1st Brigade. See Peabody s. 2d Brigade. See Miller's. Preston, Thomas W., Capt,, 42. Preston, P. JI., Capt., 37. Preston, William, Col., 41. Price, J. T., Lieut., 37. Pride, G. G., Col. 37. Pugh, Isaac C, Col., 26, 54. Pugh, Robert, 43. (^uerouze, Leon, Maj., 33. ^uinii, Francis, Col., 28. Raith, Julius, Col., 14, 15, 24, 37, 47. Raith's (3d) Brigade, 14, 15, 16, 24, 37, 45, 47, 55, 57, 58, 69, 70, 71, 90. Rankin, William A., Lieut. Col., 34. Ransom, Thomas E. G., Lieut. Col., 24. Rawle, John, Lieut,, 42. Rawlins, John A., Capt., 37. Rearden, James S., Col., 47. Reed. Hugh B., Col., 27. Reichard, August, Col., 33. Reid, Hush T., Col., 29. Rice, A. V., Lieut. Col., 28. Rich, Lucius L., Col., 36. Richards, Evan, Lieut, Col., 24. Richards, Lewis Y., Capt., 38. Richardson, Henry, Capt., 25. Richardson's Battery. (See D 1st Mo.) Richmond, W. B., Lieut., 42. Robertson, A. L.. Lieut., 42. Robertson, Felix It., Capt,, 34. Robertson's Battery. (See Alabama Troops.) Robertson, Joseph L., 44. Robins. J.. Capt., 33. Rockwell, A. F., Lieut, 40. Rogers, I'. G., Maj., 42. Rogers, William P., Lieut. Col., 34. Roman, Alfred, Lieut. Col., 33. Ross's Battery. ( Sec Michigan Troops.) Ross, John W., Lieut. Col., 54. Ross, John W., Lieut., 38. Ross, W. B., Col., 43. Roundtree, William, Capt., 42. Rosseau, Davis (J., Lieut., 40. Rosseau, Loveli !1., Brig. Gen., 29, 40, 73. Rousseau's (4th) Brigade, 21,29,40.61,64,65,99. Rowett, Richard. Maj., 25. Rowley, William R., Capt., 37. Ruggles, Daniel, Brig. Gen., 11, 18, 19,33, 43, 48, 49, 70, 73, 76. Ruggles's (1st) Division, 12, 18, 33, 43, 66, 72, 76, 105. 1st Brigade. See Gibson's. 2d Brigade. See Anderson's. 3d Brigade. See Pond's. Ruggles, E. S., Maj., 43. Ruggles, 31. B., Lieut., 43. Rumsey, I. P.. Lieut.. 38. Runnels. Hal. G.. Maj.. 34. Russell, R. 31., Col., 18, 21, 31, 42, 47. Russell's (1st) Brigade, 11, 16, 18, 21, 42, 47, 71, 77, 79. 80, 83, 86, 103. Rutledge, A. 31., Capt., 36. Rutledge's Battery. (See Tennessee Troops.) Ryan, Abraham H., Lieut., 37. Sanders, Addison H., Lieut. Col., 29. Sanderson, William L., Col., 26. Sandidge, L. D., Lieut., 43. Sandidge, S. S., Surg., 43. Sanger, William D., Maj., 39. Saxe, Edward, Capt. 60. Schlater. William H.. Capt., 41. Schwartz, Adolph, Maj., 37. Schwartz's Battery (See E, 2d 111.) Scofield, Hiram, Lieut., 39. Scott, Robert K., Lieut. Col., 38. Sedgewick. Thomas D., Col., 30. Sessions, F., Lieut., 38. 120 Shaver, R. G., Col., 35, 44, 48, 49, 59, 67, 70, 82. Shaver's (1st) Brigade, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 35, 44, 46, 48, 49, 59, 60, 67, 69, 70, 75, 76, 107. Shaw, William T., Col., 25. Shelley, M. M., Lieut., 44. Sherman, W. T., Brig. Gen., 8, 9, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 27, 39, 45, 48, 56. Sherman's (5th) Division, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 27, 39, 55, 95, 98. 1st Brigade. See McDowell's. 2d Brigade. See Stewart's. 3d Brigade. See Hildebrand's. 4th Brigade. See Buckland's. Shoemaker, Michael, Col., 31. Shorter, Ell S., Col., 34. Shoup, F. A., Maj., 44. Shoup's Battalion Artillery. (See Calvert's, Hubbard's, and Trigg's Arkansas Batteries.) Sibley, John T., Capt., 43. Siege Guns. (See B, 2d 111. ) Silfversparre, Axel, Capt., 29. Silfversparre's Battery. (See H, 1st 111.) Simmons, S., Capt., 38. Sledge, Joshua, Capt., 44. Smith, Albert J., Maj., 41. Smith, Andrew J., Brig. Gen., 37. Smith, Benjamin F., Col., 29. Smith, Charles F., Maj. Gen., 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 47. Smith's (2d) Division, 7. (See W. H. L. Wal- lace's.) Smith, Clifton H., Capt., 42. Smith, Francis M., Maj., 24. Smith, John E., Col., 24. Smith, L. E., 43. Smith, Marshall J., Col., 33, 77. Smith, Melancthon, Capt., 32. Smith's Battery. (.See Mississippi Troops.) Smith, Morgan L., Col., 26, 38, 51. Smith's (1st) Brigade, 10, 32, 38, 51, 52, 92. Smith, Preston, Col., 21, 32, 82, 84. Smith, Robert A., Col., 34. Smith, Robert W., Capt., 33. Smith, T. Kilby, Col., 27, 57. Smith, W. Sooy, Col., 30, 41, 64. Smith's (14th) Brigade, 29, 30, 41, 61, 64, 101. Southgate, Richard, Lieut., 40. Spence, P. B., Lieut., 42. Spencer, George E., 38. Stanford, Thomas J., Capt., 32. Stanford's Battery. (See Mississippi Troops.) Stanley, W. A., Col., 33. Stark, Henry, Maj., 25 Starling, Lyne, Capt., 40. St at ham, W, S., Col., 16, 36, 44. 54. Statham's (3d) Brigade, 16, 17, 21, 36, 44, 54, 72, 85, 88, 109. Steadman. Samuel H., Col., 26. Stephens, William D., Lieut., 42. Stephens, William H., Col., 32, 42, 48, 54, 59, 84, 85. Stephens's (2d) Brigade, 16, 17, 21, 32, 43, 48, 49, 54, 55, 59, 72, 79, 83, 84, 104. Stewart, A. P., Brig. Gen., 17, 21, 31, 32, 42, 47, 48, 49, 67, 69, 70, 71, 79, 81, 82. Stewart's Brigade, 16, 18, 21, 32, 42, 46, 47, 48, 67, 79, 80, 81, 103. Stewart, Frederick, Maj., 34. Stewart, Warren, Capt., 37. Stone, George H., Capt., 25. Stone's Battery. (See K, 1st Mo.) Stone, William M., Maj., 26, 54. Stout, John, Adjt., 43. Strahl, 0. F., Lieut. Col., 32, 82. Straub, W. F.. Lieut., 40. Strickland, S. A., Lieut., 38. Stricklln, W. T., Lieut., 44. Strong, W. D., Lieut., 39. Stuart, David, Col., 14, 15, 17, 27, 39, 60, 53, 57. Stuart's (2d) Brigade, 9, 14, 17, 19, 21, 27, 39, 60, 52, 53, 55, 56, 57, 58, 73, 95. Stumbaugh, Frederick S., Col., 29. Sturgess, Robert H., Capt., 24. Sullivan, Peter J.. Col., 28. Swaine, Peter T., Capt., 29. Sweeny, T. W., Col., 25, 38, 50, 51. Sweeny's (3d) Brigade, 15, 25, 38, 48, 50, 61, 91. Swett, Charles, Capt., 35. Swett's Battery. (See Mississippi Troops.) Swingley, A. L., Capt., 42. Tappan, J. C, Col., 32. Taylor, Ezra, Maj., 28, 39. Taylor's Battery. (See B, 1st 111.) Taylor, John, Lieut., 39. Taylor, William H. H., Col., 27. Tennessee, Army of the, 12, 21, 23, 24, 37, 45, 62, 90-98, 102. 1st Division. See McClernand's. 2d Division. Se W. II. L. Wallace's. 3d Division. .See Lew Wallace's. 4th Division. .See Hurlbut's. 5th Division. -See Sherman's. 6th Division. See Prentiss s. Tennessee Troops (Confederate): Artillery— Batteries: Bankhead's, 31, 80, 81, 82, 103; McClunu' - s, 36, 109; Miller's (Pillow's Flying Artillery). 35, 69, 70, 107: Polk's. 32, 83, 84, 104; Rutledge's, 36, 87, 109. Cavalry— Regiments: Forrest's, 12, 36, 74, 88, 109. Infantry— Battalions: CrewsN, 36, 86, 108. Infantry— Regiments: 1st, 32, 84, 85, 104; 2d (Bate's), 35, 71, 72, 82, 107; 2d (Walker's), 32, 82, 83, 84, 104: 4th. 16. 17, 18, 32, 70, 81, 82, 83, 103; 5th (Travis's), 18, 32,80,81,82, 103; 5th (Hill's), 35, 71. 72, 86, 107; 6th, 32, 83, 85, 104; 9th, 32, 83, 85, 87, 104: 12th, 16, 31, 80, 81, 82, 103; 13th, 14, 31, 80, 81, 83, 103; loth. 32, S3. 84, 85, 104: 19th, 36, 84, 85, 109; 20th. 36, 65, 87, 88, 109; 22d, 31. 80. 81, 86, 103; 23d, 35, 71, 72, 107; 24th, 35, 71, 72, 107; 27th, 35, 68, 69, S3. 107; 2Sth, 36, 87, 109; 33d, 18, 32, 81, 82, 83, 84, 103: 38th, IS, 22, 33, 49, 78-84, SS, 105; 44th, 35, 68, 69. 107. 45th, 36, 87, 109; 47th, 32, 110; 52(1, 31, 74. 106; 56th, 35, 68, 69, 70. 107; 154th, 16, 32, 70 83, 84, 104. Terrill, William R., Capt, 30. Terrill s Battery. (.See H, 5th U. S. I Texas Troops. Cavalry — Regiments: Wharton's ^Texas Ran- gers), 12, 18, 36, 46, 50, 80, 88, 109. Infantry— Regiments: 2d, 34, 75; 9th, 33. 76, 78, 105. 121 Thayer, John M., Col., 26, 38, 52. Thayer's (2d) Brigade, 10, 26, 38, 51, 52, 93. Thielemann, Christian, Capt.,28. Thielemann's Cavalry, (.see Illinois Troops.) Thoiu, George Thorn., Col., 37. Thomas, B. 31., Lieut., 43. Thompson, Jacob, Col., 42. Thompson, John E., Adjt.,37. Thompson. Noah !>.. Capt.,26. Thompson's Battery, i Set 9th Ind.) Thompson, Phil. B., Capt.,36. Thompson's Cavalry. (See Kentucky Troops.) Thornton, John J., Col.. 35. Throckmorton, C. B., Capt.,37. Thurber, Charles }!.. Lieut., 26. Thurber's Battery. | See I. 1st Mo.) Tiniony, James P., Capt.,24. Tiudall, Jacob T., Col., 29. Townsend, Edwin F.. Capt.,29. Trabue, Robert P.. Col., 17, 18, 19,20,21,36,44.50, 56,58,77,79,86,87. Trabue's (1st) Brigade, 10,17,18,19,21,36,44,50, 56, 58, 65, 72, 78, 79, 81, 85, 86, 87, 108. Travis. Klias. Adjt.,43. Tresilian, S. R.. Lieut.. 37. Trigs. J. F., Capt.,35. Trigg's Battery. (See Arkansas Troops.) Tronilinson, A., Capt.,33. Trudeaa, James, Brig. Gen., 42. Tupper, Ansel, Lieut. Col., 26. Tuttle, James 31.. Col., 15, 17, 19, 21, 25, 38, 46, 48, 49, 50,59,62,77. Tuttle's (lst)Brigade, 15, 16, 17, 25, 28, 48, 49, 50, 51, 59,69,70,91. Tyler. D. S. Ship, 27. Tyler. Robert C, Lieut. Col., 32. Underwood, B. I., (apt., 27. I". S.Army Regulars: Artillery — Batteries: H and M 4th (Menden- hall's),30, 62,63,64,101; H 5th (Terrill's), 30, 62, 63. 65, 100. Cavalry— Companies: C 2d, 25,92: I 4th. 25,92. Infantry— Battalions: loth, 29, 65, 99; 16th. 29, 65,99; 19th, 29, 65, 99. U. S. Navy. Gunboats— Lexington. 19. Tyler. S, 19. I'rqu hart, David, Lieut. Col.,43. Van Born, Earl, Maj. Gen. ,11,12 Van Horn. Robert T.. Lieut. Col. 28. Vausrhan. Alfred J., jr., Col.. 14, 31, 69. Veatch, James I'., Col., 27. 39 54. Veatch's (2d) Brigade, 15, IS, 27, 39, 53,54,55,94. Venable, C. D., Lieut. Col., 32, 81. IVaddell, B. B., Capt., 42. Waddell, Lloyd I).. Capt.. 24. Wagner, O. C Lieut., 37. Wagner, George I>.. Col., 31, 41. Wagner's (21st) Brigade, 31, 41, 102. Walden. Hadison 31.. Capt.. 27. Walker, J. J.. Maj., i-'. Walker, J. Knox, Col., 32. Walker, John T., Surg., 39. Wall. William B.. Maj.. 27. Wallace, E. T., Capt., 38. Wallace. Lew, Maj. Gen., 10,11,15,16,19,22,26,38, 51, 56. 605a— 03 9 allace. Lew — Continued. Wallace's (Lew) (3d) Division, 10, 11, 15, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 26, 38, 45, 50, 51, 55, 92, 93, 98. 1st Brigade. See Smith's (M. L.). 2d Brigade. See Thayer's. 3d Brigade. See Whittlesey's. allace, William, Maj., 30. allace, William II. L., Brig. Gen., 10, 11, 15, 17, 19.22,25,38,47,48,61,73,74. Wallace's (W. H. L.) (2d) Division, 7, 10, 11,18, 19, 21, 22, 25, 38, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 59, 62, 73, 91, 92, 98. 1st Brigade. See Tuttle's. 2d Brigade. See McArthur's. 3d Brigade. Sec Sweeny's. alter. II. W., Capt., 43. are, Addison, W., Lieut., 38. arner. John, Maj., 26. arren Light Artillery. (See Swett's Mississippi Battery.) aterhouse, A. C, Capt., 28, Waterhouse's Battery (See E, 1st 111.) atson's Battery. (See Louisiana Troops.) ebster, J. D., Col., 19, 37, 48, 59, 61. elker. Frederick, Capt.. 25. Welker's Battery. (See H, 1st Mo.) barton, John A., Col., 36, 88. Wharton's Cavalry. (See Texas Troops.) heeler, Joseph, Col., 21, 34, 76, 79. heeler, R. F., Lieut., 40. hittin, William S., Lieut.. 38. hittlesey, Charles, Col., 26, 38, 43. Whittlesey's (3d) Brigade, 10, 26. 38, 51, 52, 93. ickiiam, W. L.. Capt., 41. ickliffe, Charles, Col., 32. iekliffe, John W., Lieut., 40. ickliffe. Nathaniel, Capt.. 41. tlliams, Christopher II.. Col., 35. Illlams, John, Capt., 27. illiains. John D., Capt., in. Illlams, Nelson G., 26, 38, 53. 54. Williams's (1st) Brigade, 15, 17,26, 38, 49, 53, 54, 93. illlams, \V. O., Capt., 43. illianison, Ueorsc, Maj., 42. UUamson, William, 43. Illicit, August, Col., 30. ilson, , Lieut., 44. isconsln Troops. Infantry— Regiments: 14th, 29, 61, 64, 97, 111; 16th, 13. 28, 59, 60, 96, 18th, 28. 00. 67. 71. 96, 111. itliers. I). F., Lieut., 43. ithers. Jones 31., Brig. Gen , 18, 20, 34, 43, 72, 7: : ;, 85 Withers's (2d) Division. 12, 18, 34, 43, 72, 73, 105, 100. 1st Brigade. See Gladden's. 2d Brigade. See Chalmers's. 3d Brigade. .See Jackson's, itliers, R. W., 43. ood. David E., Col., 39. ood, Enos P., Lieut. Col., 24. 47. ood, Gustavus A., Lieut. Col., 31. ood, H. C. Lieut. 44. ood, Peter P., Lieut., 25. 122 Wood, S. A. M., Brif,-. Gen., 16, 21, 35, 44, 47, 48, 49, 67, 69. Wood's (3d) Brigade, 12, L3, I 1, 16, 17 18, 21, 35, 11. 46, 17, 18, 19, ."'7,59, 60, 67, 68, 69, 72, 7."., 107. Wood, Thomas .).. Brig. Gen., 31, 41. Wood's (6th) Division, 31, 41, 62, 66, 101, 102. 20th Brigade. Set Garfield's. 21st Brigade. See Wagner's. Woods, Charles is., Col., -a. Woods, Joseph J., Col., 25. Woodjard, Humphrey M.< Lieut. Col., 28, 60. Worthlngton, Thomas, Col., 27. Wright, Archibald, 42. Wright, Crafts J., Col., 25. Wright, J. J. B., Surg ,37. Wright, J. M., Capt. 40. Wright, Marcus J., Lieut Col., 32. Yandell, I). W., .Surg. 41. Yerger, William, jr., Lieut., 42. , JAN Z" 1904 y>.