. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . g victories—suffered fighting, not inretreating. So, also, the losses at the Wilderness of the Second Ver-mont, Fourth Vermont, and Ninety-third New York, oc-curred when the Federals, for the most part, held their nearly all the astonishing losses of the Confederate regi-ments were suffered when they were either Avinning victoriesor stubbornly holding on to the field of battle. Altogether, the casualties in the greatest of the battlesof the Civil War, whether considered in the aggregate or inthe tragic light of regimenta
. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . g victories—suffered fighting, not inretreating. So, also, the losses at the Wilderness of the Second Ver-mont, Fourth Vermont, and Ninety-third New York, oc-curred when the Federals, for the most part, held their nearly all the astonishing losses of the Confederate regi-ments were suffered when they were either Avinning victoriesor stubbornly holding on to the field of battle. Altogether, the casualties in the greatest of the battlesof the Civil War, whether considered in the aggregate or inthe tragic light of regimental losses, make up a wonderfulrecord. In Etude sur les caracteres generaiix de la guerre dEx-treme Orient, par Le Capitaine Brevete F. Cullmann, Paris,1909, the j^ercentage of Federal losses at Gettysburg is given COMMANDERS OF UNION BRIGADES CONSPICUOUS FOR LOSSES These brigades from the Armies of the Potomac, the Cumberland, and the Tennessee, arementioned specifically by Colonel William F. Fox, on accoTint of their notable losses in action. , -^^^^S^SF--.
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