Browsing named entities in William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington. You can also browse the collection for Carter or search for Carter in all documents.

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as actively engaged in the victory at Kinston, N. C. (Wise's Forks), which resulted in the occupation of Goldsboro. General Cox succeeded Schofield, the latter having been promoted to the command of the Army of the Ohio, which, since the arrival of the Twenty-third Corps in North Carolina, comprised two corps--the Tenth (Terry's) and Twenty-third. On the loth of April, 1865, the Twenty-third Corps numbered 14,293 present for duty, and was composed of three divisions — Ruger's, Couch's, and Carter's. It remained in North Carolina while Sherman's Army, with which it had made a junction at Goldsboro, marched northward to Washington. The corps was discontinued on August 1, 1865, many of the regiments having been mustered out before that. Twenty-Fourth Corps. Bermuda Hundred Fort Fisher Petersburg Hatcher's Run, March 30th; Fort Gregg Rice's Station Fall of Richmond Clover Hill Appomattox. The white troops of the Tenth and Eighteenth Corps were assembled in one co
6 196 202 273 Dwight's Nineteenth. Nov., ‘61 13th Connecticut Reenlisted. 2 42 44 3 157 160 204 Grover's Nineteenth. Aug., ‘62 14th Connecticut 17 188 205 1 191 192 397 Gibbon's Second. Aug., ‘62 15th Connecticut 4 34 38 5 142 147 185 Carter's Twenty-third. Aug., ‘62 16th Connecticut 6 76 82 3 240 243 325 Sturgis's Ninth. Aug., ‘62 17th Connecticut 5 48 53 1 74 75 128 Barlow's Eleventh. Aug., ‘62 18th Connecticut 4 67 71 1 80 81 152 Thoburn's Eighth. Sept., ‘62 20th Conne 175th Ohio Enlisted for one year. 1 15 16 2 106 108 124 S. Beatty's Twenty-third. Sept., ‘64 176th Ohio Enlisted for one year.         102 102 102 Rousseau's Twentieth. Sept., ‘64 177th Ohio Enlisted for one year.   2 2   82 82 84 Carter's Twenty-third. Sept., ‘64 178th Ohio Enlisted for one year.   2 2   66 66 68 Ruger's Twenty-third. Sept., ‘64 179th Ohio Enlisted for one year.         80 80 80 Rousseau's Twentieth. Sept., ‘64 180th O
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington, Chapter 15: Confederate losses — strength of the Confederate Armies--casualties in Confederate regiments — list of Confederate Generals killed — losses in the Confederate Navy. (search)
lry A. P. 11 31 7 49 5th Michigan Cavalry Merritt's Cavalry A. P. 23 15 5 43 2d Massachusetts Cavalry Merritt's Cavalry A. P. 10 28 23 61 9th New York Cavalry Merritt's Cavalry A. P. 11 32 2 45 Dabney's Mills, Va.             Feb. 5-7, 1865.             11th Pennsylvania Crawford's Fifth 9 70 9 88 16th Maine Crawford's Fifth 3 59 11 73 Wise's Forks, N. C.             March 7-10, 1865.             120th Indiana Ruger's Twenty-third 7 30   37 25th Massachusetts Carter's Twenty-third 6 19 2 27 General Index.     Page. Absentees, large number of, in Union Army 532 Accidents, deaths from 50, 528, 529 Ages of soldiers, Union Army 62 Aggregate of deaths 525 Aggregate enrollment, Confederate 554 Aggregate enrollment, Union 526, 527, 532, 533 American soldiers, heights and ages of 505 Andersonville prison, number of deaths in 51 Antietam, the bloodiest battle of the war 540 Anthropological statistics