. Battles and leaders of the Civil War : being for the most part contributions by Union and Confederate officers . rgeon-General, give thefollowing result: 19 killed, 1 mortally scalded, 31 se-verely wounded, 1 severely scalded, 31 slightly woundedor scalded. Total, 83. Casualties in the Second Attack.—Malvern, 3 killed, 1 wounded; Canonicus, 3 w ; Saugus, lw; Colorado, 4 k,17 w, 8 missing; Minnesota, 15 k, 26 w, 2 m ; Wabash, 4 k,22 w, 5 m ; Powhatan, 4 k, 17 w, 8 m ; Susquehanna, 3 k,15 w; Brooklyn, 3 w, 2m; Juniata, 5 k, 10 w ; Mohlean, 1 k,11 w; Shenandoah, 6 w, 5 m ; Ticonderoga, 2 k, 2 w


. Battles and leaders of the Civil War : being for the most part contributions by Union and Confederate officers . rgeon-General, give thefollowing result: 19 killed, 1 mortally scalded, 31 se-verely wounded, 1 severely scalded, 31 slightly woundedor scalded. Total, 83. Casualties in the Second Attack.—Malvern, 3 killed, 1 wounded; Canonicus, 3 w ; Saugus, lw; Colorado, 4 k,17 w, 8 missing; Minnesota, 15 k, 26 w, 2 m ; Wabash, 4 k,22 w, 5 m ; Powhatan, 4 k, 17 w, 8 m ; Susquehanna, 3 k,15 w; Brooklyn, 3 w, 2m; Juniata, 5 k, 10 w ; Mohlean, 1 k,11 w; Shenandoah, 6 w, 5 m ; Ticonderoga, 2 k, 2 w ; Tus-carora, 4 k, 12 w; Kansas, 1 wr; Pequot, 3 k, 5 w ; Tantie, 2 k, lw; Chippewa, 4 k, 4 w; Huron, 5 w; Seneca, 5w;Iosco, 2 k, 12 w; Mackinaw, 2 w, 2 m; Maratanza, 3w;Osceola, 3 w; Pawtuxet, 2 w; Pontoosue, 7 w ; Tacony, 4 k,11 w; Sassacus, 3 k, 3 w; Fort Jackson, 1 k, 10 w; Monti-cello, 4 k, 4 w; Nereus, 3 k, 3 w: Rhode Island, 8 w, 2m;Santiago de Cuba, 1 k, 9 w; Yanderbilt, 2 k, 13 w; Gettys-burg, 6 k, 6w; Tristram Sh andy, 2 w, 1 m; Montgomery,2 k, 4 w. Total, k, 82; w, 269; m, 35 ; grand total, MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA. SHERMANS ADVANCE FROM ATLANTA. BY OLIVER O. HOWARD, MAJOR-GENERAL, U. S. A. WHEN Sherman decided to march south from Atlanta, he ordered toThomas at Nashville Schofield with the Twenty-third Corps, Stanleywith the Fourth Cor*ps, all the cavalry, except Kilpatricks division, all thedetachments drawn back from the railway line, and such other troops, includ-ing A. J. Smiths, as Shermans military division could furnish. Shermanreserved for his right wing my two corps, the Fifteenth and Seventeenth;and for his left wing the Fourteenth and Twentieth under Slocuin. Mine,the Army of the Tennessee, numbered 33,000; Slocums, the Army ofGeorgia, 30,000; Kilpatricks division of cavalry, 5000 ; so that the aggre-gate of all arms was 68,000 men. All surplus stores and trains were sentback to Tennessee. The railway south of the Etowah was next completelydemoli


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1887