. Battery F, First Regiment Rhode Island Light Artillery in the Civil War, 1861-1865 . y; took posi-tion at night near our position the previous night. Fifteenth; no movements. Sixteenth • was ordered to advance to the first line ofthe enemys rifle-pits; soon after taking position theenemy opened fire with artillery and charged the works,driving me back with a loss as follows, viz. : one limberblown up by the enemys fire, two guns and three limbersleft on the field, horses all killed and wounded and wasunable to draw them off; killed, Privates James C. Davisand Patrick McCabe ; wounded. Sergea


. Battery F, First Regiment Rhode Island Light Artillery in the Civil War, 1861-1865 . y; took posi-tion at night near our position the previous night. Fifteenth; no movements. Sixteenth • was ordered to advance to the first line ofthe enemys rifle-pits; soon after taking position theenemy opened fire with artillery and charged the works,driving me back with a loss as follows, viz. : one limberblown up by the enemys fire, two guns and three limbersleft on the field, horses all killed and wounded and wasunable to draw them off; killed, Privates James C. Davisand Patrick McCabe ; wounded. Sergeant I. CasperSchmid, slightly ; Corporals Isaac Graham, Joseph Church,Frederic Wilcox, severely, and Albert R. Walker slightly;Privates Daniel G. Rogers, severely; Daniel W. Barnes, 166 BATTERY F, James P. Clark, John McGuire, and Michael Goldenslightly ; missing and supposed prisoners, Captain JamesBelger, Guidon John McCavanagh, Privates Charles , and Benjamin Whitham. Horses killed, wounded and abandoned twenty-seven ;wounded and brought off, eight; was ordered by Captain. J


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidbatteryffirs, bookyear1892