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+Project Gutenberg's The Civil War Centennial Handbook, by William H. Price
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Civil War Centennial Handbook
+
+Author: William H. Price
+
+Release Date: October 13, 2011 [EBook #37740]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL HANDBOOK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Mark C. Orton, Steve Klynsma and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ CIVIL WAR
+ CENTENNIAL HANDBOOK
+
+ FIRST EDITION
+ by William H. Price
+
+
+ A Civil War Research Associate Series
+
+
+
+
+
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
+
+
+ Page
+
+ =THE CIVIL WAR= 2
+
+ =FACTS=
+
+ The First Modern War 5
+ Brother Against Brother 6
+ They Also Served 9
+ The Soldier, The Battle, The Losses 11
+ The Cost of War 15
+ Numbers and Losses 17
+
+ =PICTURES=
+
+ The American soldier of the 1860's 20
+ Camp life 23
+ Passing time between campaigns 25
+ Religion and the soldier 27
+ Correspondents at the front 28
+ Ships of the line 30
+ Transportation and supplies 41
+ Tools of modern warfare 45
+ Field fortifications and entrenchments 49
+ Communications 51
+ Aerial reconnaissance 52
+ Spies and secret agents 53
+ The battle's overture 54
+ Appalling aftermath 56
+ Marks of total war 62
+ After four years--Appomattox 64
+ Last review of the Union Army 65
+ A Nation re-united 66
+
+ =UNIFORMS=
+
+ Union regulation uniforms 33
+ Union regimental uniforms 36
+ Confederate regimental uniforms 37
+ Confederate regulation uniforms 38
+
+ =DATES AND PLACES=
+
+ Chronology of battles 67
+ Map of the major battlefields 70
+
+ =RECOMMENDED READING= 72
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ CIVIL WAR
+ CENTENNIAL HANDBOOK
+ by William H. Price
+
+ 1861-1865 1961-1965
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ Published by
+ Prince Lithograph Co., Inc.
+ 4019 5th Rd. N., Arlington, Virginia
+ Copyright 1961
+
+ Printed in U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+THE CIVIL WAR
+
+ _Here brothers fought for their principles
+ Here heroes died to save their country
+ And a united people will forever cherish
+ the precious legacy of their noble manhood._
+
+ --_PENNSYLVANIA MONUMENT AT VICKSBURG_
+
+
+The Civil War, which began in the 1830's as a cold war and moved toward
+the inevitable conflict somewhere between 1850 and 1860, was one of
+America's greatest emotional experiences. When the war finally broke in
+1861, beliefs and political ideals had become so firm that they
+transcended family ties and bonds of friendship--brother was cast
+against brother. The story of this supreme test of our Nation, though
+one of tragedy, is also one of triumph, for it united a nation that had
+been divided for over a quarter century.
+
+Holding a place in history midway between the Revolutionary War of the
+18th century and the First World War of the 20th, the American Civil War
+had far-reaching effects: by the many innovations and developments it
+stimulated, it became the forerunner of modern warfare; by the demands
+it made on technology and production, it hastened the industrial
+revolution in America. This conflict also provided the ferment from
+which great personalities arise. Qualities of true greatness were
+revealed in men like William Tecumseh Sherman, the most brilliant
+strategist of modern times; Nathan Bedford Forrest, one of the greatest
+of natural born leaders; Robert E. Lee, "one of the supremely gifted men
+produced by our Nation"; and Abraham Lincoln, who, like the other great
+men of that era, would be minor characters in our history had they not
+been called upon in this time of crisis. And emerging from such trying
+times were seven future Presidents of the United States, all officers of
+the Union Army.
+
+But the story of this sectional struggle is not only one of great
+leaders and events. It is the story of 18,000 men in Gen. Sedgwick's
+Corps who formed a marching column that stretched over ten miles of
+road, and in that hot month of July 1863, the story of how they marched
+steadily for eighteen hours, stopping only once to rest, until they
+reached Gettysburg where the crucial battle was raging. It is the story
+of more than two hundred young VMI Cadets, who without hesitation left
+their classrooms to fight alongside hardened veterans at the battle of
+New Market in 1864. Or it is the story of two brothers who followed
+different flags and then met under such tragic circumstances on the
+field of battle at Petersburg.
+
+It is also a story of the human toil and machinery that produced more
+than four million small arms for the Union Army and stamped from copper
+over one billion percussion caps for these weapons during the four years
+of war. Inside the Confederacy, it is the story of experiments with new
+weapons--the submarine, iron-clad rams, torpedoes, and landmines--in an
+attempt to overcome the North's numerical superiority.
+
+It is the purpose of _The Civil War Centennial Handbook_ to present this
+unusual story of the Civil War, a mosaic composed of fragments from the
+lesser-known and yet colorful facts that have survived a century but
+have been obscured by the voluminous battle narratives and campaign
+studies.
+
+Much of this material, when originally drafted, was selected by the
+National Civil War Centennial Commission for their informative and
+interesting _Facts About the Civil War_. This original material, revised
+and enlarged, has grown into _The Civil War Centennial Handbook_.
+
+The handbook is divided into five basic parts. The first is a
+presentation of little-known and unusual facts about participants,
+battles and losses, and the cost of war. The second is a graphic
+portrayal of both the men and machines that made the war of the 1860's.
+The special selection of photographs for this portion of the story were
+made available through the courtesy of the National Archives and the
+Library of Congress. Next are reproductions in color of Union and
+Confederate uniforms from the _Official Records Atlas_ and the famous
+paintings by H. A. Ogden. The fourth section is a reference table of
+battles and losses listed in chronological order, accompanied by a map
+showing the major engagements of the war. And primarily for the growing
+number of new Civil War buffs, there is a roster of Civil War Round
+Tables, as well as a recommended list of outstanding books on the Civil
+War.
+
+The material presented in The _Civil War Centennial Handbook_ has been
+selected from standard sources, the most outstanding of which are: the
+_Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies and Navies_,
+Moore's _Rebellion Record_, Cullum's _Biographical Register of West
+Point Graduates_, Phisterer's _Statistical Record_, Livermore's _Numbers
+and Losses in the Civil War_, Fox's _Regimental Losses_, the _Dictionary
+of American Biography_, Dyer's _Compendium of the War of the Rebellion_,
+the _Annual Reports of the Secretary of War_, and last but far from
+least, one of the richest sources of information available, my fellow
+members of the District of Columbia Civil War Round Table.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST MODERN WAR
+
+ _In the arts of life, man invents nothing; but in the arts of
+ death he outdoes Nature herself, and produces by chemistry and
+ machinery all the slaughter of plague, pestilence and famine.
+
+ --_GEORGE BERNARD SHAW_
+
+
+The arts of tactics and strategy were revolutionized by the many
+developments introduced during the 1860's. Thus the Civil War ushered in
+a new era in warfare with the ...
+
+ FIRST practical machine gun.
+ FIRST repeating rifle used in combat.
+ FIRST use of the railroads as a major means of transporting
+ troops and supplies.
+ FIRST mobile siege artillery mounted on rail cars.
+ FIRST extensive use of trenches and field fortifications.
+ FIRST large-scale use of land mines, known as "subterranean
+ shells".
+ FIRST naval mines or "torpedoes".
+ FIRST ironclad ships engaged in combat.
+ FIRST multi-manned submarine.
+ FIRST organized and systematic care of the wounded on the
+ battlefield.
+ FIRST widespread use of rails for hospital trains.
+ FIRST organized military signal service.
+ FIRST visual signaling by flag and torch during combat.
+ FIRST use of portable telegraph units on the battlefield.
+ FIRST military reconnaissance from a manned balloon.
+ FIRST draft in the United States.
+ FIRST organized use of Negro troops in combat.
+ FIRST voting in the field for a national election by servicemen.
+ FIRST income tax--levied to finance the war.
+ FIRST photograph taken in combat.
+ FIRST Medal of Honor awarded an American soldier.
+
+
+
+
+BROTHER AGAINST BROTHER
+
+ "_And why should we not accord them equal honor, for they were
+ both Americans, imbued with those qualities which have made
+ this country great._"
+
+ _--BELL IRVIN WILEY_
+
+
+PRESIDENT LINCOLN, the Commander-In-Chief of the Union Army, had four
+brothers-in-law in the Confederate Army, and three of his sisters-in-law
+were married to Confederate officers.
+
+JEFFERSON DAVIS, Commander-in-Chief of the Confederate Army, served the
+U.S. Army as a colonel during the Mexican War and held the post of
+Secretary of War in President Pierce's cabinet. Previously, as a senior
+United States Senator, he had been Chairman of the Senate Military
+Affairs Committee. Lincoln and Davis were born in Kentucky, the only
+state that has ever had two of its sons serve as President at the same
+time.
+
+JOHN TYLER, 10th President of the United States, was elected to the
+Confederate States Congress in 1862, but died before it convened. On
+March 4, 1861, Tyler's granddaughter unfurled the first flag of the
+Confederacy when it was raised over the Confederate Capitol at
+Montgomery, Alabama.
+
+The Battle of Lynchburg, Virginia, in June 1864 brought together two
+future Presidents of the United States--General RUTHERFORD B. HAYES and
+Major WILLIAM McKINLEY, U.S.A.--and a former Vice-President--General
+JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE, C.S.A. Five other Union generals later rose to the
+Presidency: ANDREW JOHNSON, U.S. GRANT, JAMES A. GARFIELD, CHESTER A.
+ARTHUR, and BENJAMIN HARRISON.
+
+The four Secretaries of War during the eleven years prior to the Civil
+War were all from the South. All four later held office in the
+Confederate government.
+
+Fourteen of the 26 Confederate Senators had previously served in the
+United States Congress. In the Confederate House of Representatives, 33
+members were former U.S. Congressmen.
+
+Confederate Generals ROBERT E. LEE and P.G.T. BEAUREGARD both ranked
+second in their graduating classes at West Point, and both officers
+later returned to hold the position of Superintendent of the Academy.
+Lee's appointment to the rank of full colonel in the United States Army
+was signed by President Lincoln.
+
+In 1859 WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN was appointed the first president of
+what is today the Louisiana State University. Although his chief claim
+to fame was the destructive "March to the Sea", a portrait of the Union
+general occupies a prominent place in the Memorial Tower of this
+Southern university.
+
+Over one-fourth of the West Point graduates who fought during the Civil
+War were in the Confederate Army. Half of the 304 who served in Gray
+were on active duty in the United States Army when war broke out. Of the
+total number of West Pointers who went South, 148 were promoted to the
+rank of general officer. In all, 313 of the 1,098 officers in the United
+States Army joined the Confederacy.
+
+One fourth of the officers in the United States Navy resigned to cast
+their lot with the Confederate Navy. Of the 322 who resigned, 243 were
+line officers.
+
+When J.E.B. STUART raided Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, in 1862, he was
+pursued by Federal cavalry under the command of his father-in-law, Brig.
+Gen. PHILIP ST. GEORGE COOKE, whose name is frequently confused with
+that of Confederate General PHILIP ST. GEORGE COCKE, both West Pointers.
+As if that weren't bad enough, there was a Union general by the name of
+JEFFERSON DAVIS.
+
+WILLIAM T. MAGRUDER (U.S.M.A. 1850) commanded a squadron of the 1st
+United States Cavalry at First Manassas and during the Peninsula
+Campaign. In August 1862 he was granted leave of absence, and two months
+later he switched loyalties to join the Confederate Army. On July 3,
+1863, he fell during the famous charge at Gettysburg.
+
+The Virginia Military Institute graduated WILLIAM H. GILLESPIE in the
+special war class of 1862. While awaiting his appointment as an officer
+on "Stonewall" Jackson's staff, he deserted to the Union Army and became
+Adjutant of the 14th West Virginia Cavalry.
+
+If Blue and Gray didn't meet again at Gettysburg during the annual
+reunions, they at least met on the banks of the Nile. No less than 50
+former Union and Confederate officers held the rank of colonel or above
+in the Army of the Khedive during the 1870's. Two ex-Confederate
+generals and three former Union officers attained the rank of general in
+the Egyptian Army, holding such positions as Chief of Staff, Chief of
+Engineers, and Chief Ordnance Officer.
+
+Only three Confederates ever held the rank of general in the United
+States Army following the Civil War--MATTHEW C. BUTLER, FITZHUGH LEE,
+and JOE WHEELER. Lee and Wheeler, though they served as generals in the
+Confederate Army as well as in the United States Army during the Spanish
+American War, both graduated at the bottom of their West Point classes.
+When Lee and Wheeler were promoted to major general in 1901, their
+commissions were signed by a former Yankee officer--President William
+McKinley.
+
+General GEORGE PICKETT, a native Virginian, was appointed to the United
+States Military Academy from the State of Illinois. John Todd Stuart
+obtained the appointment at the request of his law partner, Abraham
+Lincoln.
+
+The senior general in the Confederate Army, SAMUEL COOPER, hailed from
+New York. Before the war, he had been Adjutant General of the United
+States Army. From 1861 to 1865 he was the Adjutant and Inspector General
+of the Confederate Army.
+
+Fort Sumter was surrendered in 1861 by a Kentucky-born Union officer,
+Major ROBERT ANDERSON. Confederate General JOHN C. PEMBERTON, a
+Pennsylvanian by birth, surrendered Vicksburg in 1863. There was no
+collusion in either surrender; both men were loyal supporters of their
+respective causes.
+
+The first Superintendent of the United States Naval Academy, Commodore
+FRANKLIN BUCHANAN, commanded the C.S.S. _Virginia_ (_Merrimac_) in its
+first engagement. On the first ship to surrender under the _Virginia's_
+guns was Buchanan's brother, an officer of the U.S. Navy.
+
+Major CLIFTON PRENTISS of the 6th Maryland Infantry (Union) and his
+younger brother WILLIAM, of the 2nd Maryland Infantry (Confederate),
+were both mortally wounded when their regiments clashed at Petersburg on
+April 2, 1865--just seven days before hostilities ceased. Both were
+removed from the battlefield and after a separation of four years, they
+were taken to the same hospital in Washington. Each fought and each died
+for his cause.
+
+
+
+
+ THEY ALSO SERVED
+
+ _Fame is the echo of actions, resounding them to the world,
+ save that the echo repeats only the last part, but fame relates
+ all...._
+
+ --_FULLER_
+
+
+Poet SIDNEY LANIER fought as a private in the 2nd Georgia Battalion
+during the Seven Days' Battles near Richmond. In November 1862 he was
+captured on a Confederate blockade-runner and imprisoned at Point
+Lookout, Maryland. Sixteen years after the war he died from tuberculosis
+contracted while in prison.
+
+New England poet ALBERT PIKE commanded the Confederate Department of
+Indian Territory. He wrote the stanzas of the popular Southern version
+of _Dixie_, a tune which originated not in the South, but in New York
+City during the 1850's.
+
+At the battle of the Monocacy in 1864 Union General LEW WALLACE, author
+of _Ben-Hur_, commanded the force defending Washington against General
+Jubal Early's attack. After the war he served as Governor of New Mexico
+and Minister to Turkey.
+
+When the Marion Rangers organized in 1861, SAMUEL CLEMENS (Mark Twain)
+joined as a lieutenant, but he left this Missouri Company before it was
+mustered into Confederate service, having fired only one hostile shot
+during the war.
+
+Confederate Private HENRY MORTON STANLEY, of "Doctor Livingstone, I
+presume" fame, survived a bloody charge at Shiloh only to be taken
+prisoner. Later he joined the Union ranks and finished the war in Yankee
+blue.
+
+ANDREW CARNEGIE was a young man in his mid-twenties when he left his
+position as superintendent of the Pittsburgh Division, Pennsylvania
+Railroad to pitch in with workers rebuilding the rail line from
+Annapolis to Washington. Later in 1861 he was given the position of
+superintendent of military railways and government telegraph.
+
+HENRY A. DUPONT, grandson of the DuPont industries founder, was awarded
+the Congressional Medal of Honor for gallantry at the battle of Cedar
+Creek in October 1864. Captain DuPont, who had graduated from West Point
+at the head of his class in 1861, went on to serve as United States
+Senator from Delaware.
+
+ELIAS HOWE presented each field and staff officer of the 5th
+Massachusetts Regiment with a stallion fully equipped for service.
+Later, he volunteered as a private, and when the State failed to pay his
+unit, he met the regimental payroll with his own money.
+
+At the age of 15 GEORGE WESTINGHOUSE ran away from home and joined the
+Union Army. Neither he nor Elias Howe rose to officer rank, but both are
+today in the Hall of Fame for their achievements--the air brake and the
+sewing machine.
+
+In 1861 CORNELIUS VANDERBILT presented a high-speed side-wheel steamer
+to the United States Navy. At the time, there were less than 50 ships in
+active naval service. The cruiser, named the _Vanderbilt_, captured
+three blockade-runners during the war and in 1865 participated in the
+bombardment and amphibious assault on Fort Fisher. The Federal Navy at
+that time had grown to a fleet of more than 550 steam-powered ships.
+
+Admiral GEORGE DEWEY, of Manila Bay fame, served as a young lieutenant
+under Admiral Farragut during the attack on Port Hudson in 1863. His
+ship was the only one lost in the engagement.
+
+Colonel CHRISTOPHER C. ("Kit") CARSON commanded the 1st New Mexico
+Volunteers (Union), and campaigned against the Comanche, Navajo, and
+Apache Indians during the Civil War. In 1866 he was promoted to
+brigadier general.
+
+In his mid-teens JESSE JAMES joined the Confederate raiders led by
+William Quantrill. The famous "Dead or alive" reward for Jesse in 1882
+was issued by an ex-Confederate officer, Governor Thomas T. Crittenden
+of Missouri.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLDIER, THE BATTLE, THE LOSSES
+
+ _"There's many a boy here today who looks on war as all glory,
+ but, boys, it is all hell."_
+
+
+ --_WILLIAM TECUMSEH SHERMAN_
+
+
+Of the 2.3 million men enlisted in the Union Army, seventy per cent were
+under 23 years of age. Approximately 100,000 were 16 and an equal number
+15. Three hundred lads were 13 or less, and the records show that there
+were 25 no older than 10 years.
+
+The average infantry regiment of 10 companies consisted of 30 line
+officers and 1300 men. However, by the time a new regiment reached the
+battlefield, it would often have less than 800 men available for combat
+duty. Sickness and details as cooks, teamsters, servants, and clerks
+accounted for the greatly reduced numbers. Actually, in many of the
+large battles the regimental fighting strength averaged no more than 480
+men.
+
+In 1864 the basic daily ration for a Union soldier was (in ounces):
+20--beef, 18--flour, 2.56--dry beans, 1.6--green coffee, 2.4--sugar,
+.64--salt, and smaller amounts of pepper, yeast powder, soap, candles,
+and vinegar. While campaigning, soldiers seldom obtained their full
+ration and many had to forage for subsistence.
+
+In the Army of Northern Virginia in 1863 the rations available for every
+100 Confederate soldiers over a 30-day period consisted of 1/4 lb. of
+bacon, 18 oz. of flour, 10 lbs. of rice, and a small amount of peas and
+dried fruit--when they could be obtained. (It is little wonder that Lee
+elected to carry the war into Pennsylvania--if for no other reason than
+to obtain food for an undernourished army.)
+
+During the Shenandoah Valley campaign of 1862 "Stonewall" Jackson
+marched his force of 16,000 men more than 600 miles in 35 days. Five
+major battles were fought and four separate Union armies, totaling
+63,000, were defeated.
+
+In June 1864, the U.S.S. _Kearsarge_ sank the C.S.S. _Alabama_ in a
+fierce engagement in the English Channel off Cherbourg, France.
+Frenchmen gathered along the beach to witness the hour-long duel, which
+inspired a young French artist, Edouard Manet, to paint the battle scene
+that now hangs in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
+
+The Confederate cruiser _Shenandoah_ sailed completely around the world
+raiding Union commerce vessels and whalers. The ship and crew
+surrendered to British authorities at Liverpool in November 1865, seven
+months after Lee's surrender at Appomattox.
+
+The greatest naval bombardment during the war was on Christmas Eve,
+1864, at Fort Fisher, North Carolina. Fifty-seven vessels, with a total
+of 670 guns, were engaged--the largest fleet ever assembled by the U.S.
+Navy up to that time. The Army, Navy, and Marines combined in a joint
+operation to reduce and capture the fort.
+
+In July, 1862 the first Negro troops of the Civil War were organized by
+General David Hunter. Known as the 1st South Carolina Regiment, they
+were later designated the 33rd Regiment United States Colored Troops.
+Some 186,000 Negro soldiers served in the Union Army, 4,300 of whom
+became battle casualties.
+
+At the battle of Fredericksburg in 1862, the line of Confederate
+trenches extended a distance of seven miles. The troop density in these
+defensive works was 11,000 per mile.
+
+Over 900 guns and mortars bristled from the 68 forts defending the
+Nation's Capital during the war. The fortifications, constructed by the
+Engineer Corps during the early part of the war, circled the city on a
+37-mile perimeter.
+
+During Sherman's campaign from Chattanooga to Atlanta, the Union Army of
+the Tennessee, in a period of four months, constructed over 300 miles of
+rifle pits, fired 149,670 artillery rounds and 22,137,132 rounds of
+small-arms ammunition.
+
+To fire a Civil War musket, eleven separate motions had to be made. The
+regulation in the 1860's specified that a soldier should fire three
+aimed shots per minute, allowing 20 seconds per shot and less than two
+seconds per motion.
+
+At the battle of Stone's River, Tennessee, in January, 1863, the Federal
+infantry in three days exhausted over 2,000,000 rounds of ammunition,
+and the artillery fired 20,307 rounds. The total weight of the
+projectiles was in excess of 375,000 pounds.
+
+At the Battle of First Bull Run or Manassas, it has been estimated that
+between 8,000 and 10,000 bullets were fired for every man killed and
+wounded.
+
+The campaign against Petersburg, the longest sustained operation of the
+war, began in the summer of 1864 and lasted for 10 months, until the
+spring of '65. The fighting covered an area of more than 170 square
+miles, with 35 miles of trenches and fortifications stretching from
+Richmond to the southwest of Petersburg. During September, 1864, nearly
+175 field and siege guns poured forth a daily average of 7.8 tons of
+iron on the Confederate works.
+
+The greatest cavalry battle in the history of the western hemisphere was
+fought at Brandy Station, Virginia, on June 9, 1863. Nearly 20,000
+cavalrymen were engaged for more than 12 hours. At the height of the
+battle, along Fleetwood Hill, charges and countercharges were made
+continuously for almost three hours.
+
+The greatest regimental loss of the entire war was borne by the 1st
+Maine Heavy Artillery. The unit saw no action until 1864, but in the
+short span of less than one year, over half of its 2,202 men engaged in
+battle were hit. In the assault on Petersburg in June, 1864, the
+regiment lost 604 men killed and wounded in less than 20 minutes.
+
+The largest regimental loss in a single battle was suffered by the 26th
+North Carolina Infantry at Gettysburg. The regiment went into battle
+with a little over 800 men, and by the end of the third day, 708 were
+dead, wounded, or missing. In one company of 84, every officer and man
+was hit.
+
+Of the 46 Confederate regiments that went into the famous charge at
+Gettysburg on July 3, 1863, 15 were commanded by General Pickett.
+Thirteen of his regiments were led by Virginia Military Institute
+graduates; only two of them survived the charge.
+
+The heaviest numerical loss during any single battle was at Gettysburg,
+where 40,322 Americans were killed or wounded. On the Union side 21 per
+cent of those engaged were killed or wounded, in the Confederate ranks
+30 per cent--the largest percentage of Confederates hit in any battle.
+The largest percentage of Union soldiers hit in battle was at Port
+Hudson in May 1863, where 26.7 per cent of those engaged were killed or
+wounded.
+
+During May and June 1864 the Armies of the Potomac and the James lost
+77,452 men--a greater number than Lee had in his entire army.
+
+Union Army hospitals treated over 6 million cases during the war. There
+were twice as many deaths from disease as from hostile bullets. Diarrhea
+and dysentery alone took the lives of 44,558 Union soldiers.
+
+From 1861-1865 the Quartermaster Corps of the Union Army made 116,148
+burials.
+
+In the 79 National Civil War cemeteries, 54 per cent of the graves are
+those of unknown soldiers. The largest Civil War cemetery is at
+Vicksburg, where 16,000 soldiers rest; only 3,896 are known. At the
+Confederate prison site in Salisbury, North Carolina, where 12,126 Union
+soldiers are buried, 99 per cent are unknown.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+THE COST OF WAR
+
+ _Nor deem the irrevocable Past
+ As wholly wasted, wholly vain,
+ If, rising on its wrecks, at last
+ To something nobler we attain._
+
+ --_HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW_
+
+
+From 1861-1865 it cost the United States Government approximately 2
+million dollars a day to prosecute the war; the Second World War cost
+more than 113 million dollars a day.
+
+In 1880 the Secretary of the Treasury reported that the Civil War had
+cost the Federal Government 6.19 billion dollars. By 1910 the cost of
+the war, including pensions and other veterans benefits, had reached
+11.5 billion dollars. World War II was three months shorter than the
+Civil War, but from 1942-1945 approximately 156 billion dollars was
+spent on the military establishment.
+
+The total cost of the war to the South has been estimated at 4 billion
+dollars.
+
+The public debt outstanding for an average population of 33 million rose
+from $2.80 to $75 per capita between 1861 and 1865. In mid-1958 the per
+capita debt stood at $1,493 for a population of 175.5 million.
+
+In 1958 the government was providing pensions for 3,042 widows of Union
+veterans. In June of that year, as a result of special legislation, 526
+widows of Southern soldiers and the two surviving Confederate veterans
+became eligible for Federal pensions. The last Union veteran, Albert
+Woolson, had died in 1956, leaving the two Confederates, John Salling
+and Walter Williams, to draw the highest Civil War pensions paid by the
+United States Government. The last Civil War veteran, Walter Williams,
+died in December 1959 at the age of 117. Since then, William's claim as
+a veteran has been disputed in the newspapers, but sufficient evidence
+does not exist to positively prove or disprove his military status.
+
+The pursuit and capture of Jefferson Davis at Irwinville, Georgia, cost
+the Federal Government $97,031.62.
+
+From 1861-1865 it cost the Federal government, in millions of dollars:
+
+ $727--to clothe and feed the Army
+ 18--to clothe and feed the Navy
+ 339--for transportation of troops and supplies
+ 127--for cavalry and artillery horses
+ 76--for the purchase of arms
+ 8--to maintain and provide for Confederate prisoners
+
+Soldiers and sailors of the United States received 1.34 billion dollars
+in pay during the war.
+
+In 1861 an infantry private was paid $13 per month--compared to a
+private's pay of $83 today. A Civil War colonel drew $95 per month and a
+brigadier general $124. Their counterparts today are paid a monthly base
+rate of $592 and $800.
+
+During the 1860's the average cost of a musket was $13 as compared to
+$105 for an M1 Garand in World War II.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+NUMBERS AND LOSSES
+
+ North South[1]
+ Population 22,400,000 9,103,000[2]
+ Military Age Group (18-45) 4,600,000 985,000
+ Trained Militia 1827-1861 2,470,000 692,000
+ Regular Army January, 1861 16,400 0
+ Military Potential 1861 2,486,400 692,000
+ Total Individuals in Service 1861-1865 2,213,400 1,003,600
+
+ Total Strength July, 1861 219,400 114,000
+ Total Strength January, 1863 962,300 450,200
+ Peak Strength 1864-1865 1,044,660 484,800
+ Army 980,100 481,200
+ Navy 60,700 3,000
+ Marines 3,860 600
+
+ Total Hit in Battle 385,100 320,000
+ Total Battle Deaths 110,100 94,000
+ Killed in Battle 67,100 54,000
+ Died of Wounds 43,000 40,000
+ Wounded (not mortally)[3] 275,000 226,000
+ Missing in Action 6,750 ---
+ Captured[4] 211,400 462,000
+ Died in Prison 30,200 26,000
+ Died of Disease 224,000 60,000
+ Other Deaths 34,800 ---
+ Desertions[5] 199,000 83,400
+ Discharged 426,500 57,800
+ Surrendered 1865 174,223
+
+[Footnote 1: Confederate figures are based upon the best information and
+estimates available.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Includes 3,760,000 slaves in the seceded states.]
+
+[Footnote 3: A number of these were returned to duty. In the Union Army,
+those who were not fit for combat were placed in the Veteran Reserve
+Corps and performed administrative duties.]
+
+[Footnote 4: An undetermined number were exchanged and returned to
+duty.]
+
+[Footnote 5: Many deserters returned to duty. In the Union Army, where
+$300 bounty was paid for a 3-year enlistment, it was not uncommon to
+find a soldier picking up his bounty in one regiment and then deserting
+to join another unit just for the additional bounty.]
+
+
+
+
+CIVIL WAR ROUND TABLES
+
+
+CALIFORNIA (3)
+
+ La Jolla--Ezra J. Warner, P.O. Box 382.
+
+ Los Angeles--(Southern California CWRT), Col. Paul "Reb"
+ Benton, 466 South Bedford Drive, Beverly Hills, California.
+
+ Torrance--Peter A. LaRosa, 4240 West 178th Street.
+
+COLORADO (1)
+
+ Denver--(Colorado CWRT), Hubert Kaub, 740 Steele Street, Zone
+ 6.
+
+CONNECTICUT (2)
+
+ Hartford--W. J. Lowry, Hartford National Bank & Trust Company.
+
+ Niantic--Norman B. Peck, Jr., Remagen Road.
+
+DELAWARE (1)
+
+ Wilmington--Dr. Richard H. Myers, 34 Paschall Road, Zone 3.
+
+DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA (1)
+
+ Washington--James M. Lazard, Box 38, Army & Navy Club, Zone 5.
+
+GEORGIA (1)
+
+ Atlanta--Col. Allen P. Julian, 1753 Peachtree Street, N. E.
+
+KENTUCKY (1)
+
+ Lexington--(Kentucky CWRT), Dr. Hambleton Tapp, University of
+ Kentucky.
+
+ILLINOIS (8)
+
+ Chicago--Gilbert Twiss, 18 West Chestnut Street.
+
+ LaSalle--Dr. Russell C. Slater, 744 First Street.
+
+ Lyons--(Gray and Blue CWRT), O. H. Felton, Box 106.
+
+ Park Forest--Malcolm Macht, 495 Talala.
+
+ Peoria--(National Blues CWRT), H. R. Sours, 2623 West Moss
+ Avenue.
+
+ Quad Cities--Mrs. Marilyn A. Hasselroth, Box 508, Milan,
+ Illinois.
+
+ Rockford--Timothy Hughes, 2208 Ridge Avenue.
+
+ Springfield--George L. Cashman, Lincoln Lodge, Oak Ridge.
+
+INDIANA (6)
+
+ Evansville--Col. Robert M. Leich, P.O. Box 869, Zone 1.
+
+ Indianapolis--Donald Shaner, 3122 North Richardt, Zone 26.
+
+ Mishawaka--H. O. Soencer, Mishawaka Public Library.
+
+ New Albany--Elsa Strassweg, 201 East Spring Street.
+
+ South Bend--Ben R. Violette, 2220 Berkley Place, Zone 16.
+
+ Terre Haute--(Vigo County CWRT), Ira Campbell, 426 South 17th
+ Street.
+
+IOWA (1)
+
+ Cedar Rapids--Mrs. Robert A. Miller, 249 Blake Boulevard.
+
+LOUISIANA (1)
+
+ New Orleans--David L. Markstein, 2232 Wirth Place, Zone 15.
+
+MARYLAND (2)
+
+ Baltimore--Leonard Sandler, Nelmar Apartments 2-C, Zone 17.
+
+ Hagerstown--Theron Rinehart, Box 1155.
+
+MASSACHUSETTS (2)
+
+ Andover--Stanley E. Butcher, 4 Washington Avenue.
+
+ Boston--Richard H. Fitzpatrick, 15 Hathway Road, Lexington,
+ Zone 73.
+
+MICHIGAN (5)
+
+ Battle Creek--Mrs. Pearl Foust, 150 Eldredge.
+
+ Detroit--(Abraham Lincoln CWRT of Michigan), Lloyd C. Nyman,
+ 951 South Oxford Road, Grosse Pointe Woods, Zone 36.
+
+ Flint--Philip C. Chinn, 2933 Wyoming Street.
+
+ Jackson--Edward J. Young, 2535 Kibby Street.
+
+ Kalamazoo--Mrs. Wesley R. Burrell, Galesburg, Michigan.
+
+MINNESOTA (1)
+
+ Twin Cities--William H. Rowe, 6040 James Avenue South,
+ Minneapolis 19, Minnesota.
+
+MISSISSIPPI (1)
+
+ Jackson--(Mississippi CWRT), Mrs. Genevieve Wilde Barksdale,
+ 3405 Old Canton Road.
+
+MISSOURI (2)
+
+ Kansas City--Charles W. Jones, 1016 Baltimore Avenue.
+
+ St. Louis--Gale Johnston, Jr., Projected Planning Company, Room
+ 200, 506 Olive Street, Zone 1.
+
+NEBRASKA (1)
+
+ Omaha--Frank E. Gibson, Public Library.
+
+NEW JERSEY (2)
+
+ Hackensack--(Bergen County CWRT), Miss Celeste Slauson, Johnson
+ Free Public Library.
+
+ Monmouth County--Mrs. Jeanne Marie Predham, 155 West Sylvania
+ Avenue, Neptune City, New Jersey.
+
+NEW YORK (6)
+
+ Binghampton--Theodore E. Mulford, Link Aviation Inc.
+
+ Fayetteville--(Onondaga County CWRT), E. H. Hobbs, 206
+ Washington Building.
+
+ Jamestown--E. J. Muzzy, 142 Prospect Street.
+
+ Mayville--Robert Laughlin, Portage Street.
+
+ New York City--Arnold Gates, 289 New Hyde Park Road, Garden
+ City, N. Y.
+
+ Rochester--William J. Welch, 80 Elaine Drive. Zone 23.
+
+NORTH CAROLINA (1)
+
+ High Point--(North Carolina CWRT), John R(ebel) Peacock, Box
+ 791.
+
+OHIO (8)
+
+ Chillicothe--(Gen. Joshua W. Sill Chapter), Kent Castor, Box
+ 273.
+
+ Cincinnati--J. Louis Warm, 4165 Rose Hill Avenue, Zone 5.
+
+ Cleveland--Edward T. Downer, 1105 Euclid Avenue, Zone 6.
+
+ Dayton--Kathryn G. Crawford (Mrs. F. M.), 3438 East 5th Street,
+ Zone 3.
+
+ East Cleveland--James C. Pettit, 13905 Orinoco Avenue, Zone 12.
+
+ Lancaster--(William T. Sherman Chapter), Dr. Robert H. Eyman,
+ Sr., 137 West Mulberry Street.
+
+ Toledo--Robert G. Morris, 2619 Powhatan Parkway, Zone 6.
+
+ Wooster--Dr. A. B. Huff, 230 North Market Street.
+
+OKLAHOMA (2)
+
+ Stillwater--(CWRT of Oklahoma State University) LeRoy H.
+ Fischer, History Department.
+
+ Tulsa--R. L. Summers, 1204 North Tacoma Place.
+
+PENNSYLVANIA (6)
+
+ Bucks-Montgomery County--Edgar F. Hoskings, Jr., 31 East Park
+ Avenue, Sellersville, Pennsylvania.
+
+ Gettysburg--Jacob M. Sneads, 115 North Stratton Street.
+
+ Philadelphia--(Lincoln Civil War Society), Arthur G. McDowell,
+ 1500 North Broad Street, Zone 21.
+
+ Pittsburgh--Bernd P. Rose, Chamber of Commerce Building.
+
+ Susquehanna CWRT--W. N. Barto, 39 South 2nd Street, Lewisburg,
+ Pennsylvania.
+
+ Washington--James R. Braden, 755 East Main Street.
+
+TENNESSEE (2)
+
+ LaFollette (Big Creek Gap CWRT), Guy Easterly, 139 North
+ Tennessee Ave.
+
+ Murfreesboro--(Nathan Bedford Forrest CWRT), Homer Pittard, Box
+ 688, Middle Tennessee State College.
+
+TEXAS (2)
+
+ Houston--Richard Colquette, 5589 Cedar Creek Drive, Zone 27.
+
+ Waco--Lt. Col. H. G. Simpson, 2624 Austin Avenue.
+
+VIRGINIA (6)
+
+ Alexandria--William B. Hurd, 219 South Royal Street.
+
+ Franklin--S. W. Rawls, Jr., 503 North Main Street.
+
+ Lynchburg--James B. Noell, 303 Madison Street.
+
+ Harrisonburg--(Shenandoah Valley CWRT), Grimes Henenberger, 345
+ South Main Street.
+
+ Richmond--John C. Stinson, 7202 Brigham Road.
+
+ Winchester--Fred Y. Stotler, Sunnyside Station.
+
+WEST VIRGINIA (1)
+
+ Moundsville--Delf Norona, 315 Seventh Street.
+
+WISCONSIN (2)
+
+ Madison--Russ Spindler, Box 377, Zone 1.
+
+ Milwaukee--H. P. Spangenberg, 203A South 77th Street.
+
+CANADA (1)
+
+ Toronto--(Canadian Round Table), A. P. Colesbury, 518 Dovecourt
+ Road.
+
+ENGLAND (1)
+
+ London--(Confederate Research Club), Patrick C. Courtney, 34
+ Highclere Avenue, Leigh Park, Havant, Hampshire, England,
+ United Kingdom.
+
+GERMANY (1)
+
+ Wiesbaden--Lt. Col. Tom Nordan, Hdqs., USAFE, APO 633, N. Y.,
+ N. Y.
+
+[Illustration: _None too military in appearance, such ragged squads of
+men and boys developed into an army that marched an average of 16 miles
+a day._]
+
+[Illustration: _Smartly dressed amphibious soldiers. Some of the 3,000
+U.S. Marines of the Civil War made landings on Southern coasts, but the
+majority served as gun crews aboard ship._]
+
+[Illustration: _Jack-tars of the old Navy saw plenty of action in
+clearing the Mississippi and chasing down Confederate raiders of the
+high seas. Because of the high bounties and pay, many foreign seafarers
+were attracted to both navies._]
+
+[Illustration: _Ill-clad and poorly equipped, Confederate volunteers at
+Pensacola, Florida, wait their turn for the smell of black powder._]
+
+[Illustration: _On the silent battlefield at Gettysburg, veterans of
+Lee's Army of Northern Virginia who survived the baptism by fire await
+their fate as prisoners of war._]
+
+[Illustration: _Regimental camp sites created sanitary problems that
+went unsolved. Typhoid fever, diarrhea, and dysentery took the lives of
+over 70,000 Union soldiers._]
+
+[Illustration: _Private residences like the Wallach House at Culpeper,
+Virginia, provided generals on both sides with comfortable quarters in
+the field. Staff officers were usually tented on the lawns._]
+
+[Illustration: _Log cabins often replaced tents during the winter months
+when campaigning slackened and the armies settled down. In some camps it
+was not uncommon to find visiting army wives._]
+
+[Illustration: _Soldiers turned to a variety of activities to break the
+long days and weeks of monotonous camplife. Even officers were not
+immune to the horseplay._]
+
+[Illustration: _When two or more Yanks or Rebs gathered together, a deck
+of cards often made its appearance. Fearful of an angry God, soldiers
+usually discarded such instruments of sin before entering battle._]
+
+[Illustration: _Chess, a favorite pastime in camp, finds Colonel Martin
+McMahon, General Sedgwick's adjutant, engaged in the contest that was a
+favorite of Napoleon and many other military leaders._]
+
+[Illustration: _A much disliked chore even in fair weather--a lone Union
+soldier walks his post in the bitter cold at Nashville._]
+
+[Illustration: _A forerunner of Father Francis Patrick Duffy, heroic
+Chaplain of the famous 69th New York Regiment in World War I, says Mass
+for the Shamrock Regiment of the 1860's. Most Civil War regiments had a
+chaplain._]
+
+[Illustration: _A contribution to camp religious life, the 50th New York
+Engineers constructed this church for their comrades at Petersburg._]
+
+[Illustration: _Newspaper correspondents like these from the_ New York
+Herald _kept the public well informed, though they often revealed
+valuable military information to the Confederacy. The New York paper
+usually reached the Confederate War Department on the day following
+publication._]
+
+[Illustration: _With the technique of photo-engraving yet to be
+developed, war scenes for newspapers and magazines had to be drawn and
+reproduced from woodcuts. Artists such as A. R. Waud, shown here at
+Gettysburg, vividly depicted the events for_ Harper's Weekly.]
+
+[Illustration: _The Civil War as it appeared back home. It was almost 40
+years before the public saw the thousands of photographs taken by Mathew
+Brady and his contemporaries._]
+
+[Illustration: _In a desperate attempt to raise the Federal blockade of
+Southern ports, the Confederate Navy built the first ironclad. More than
+a dozen of these rams, all similar to the_ Albemarle _(pictured above),
+were constructed._]
+
+[Illustration: _At first, ironclads were scoffed at by Federal naval
+authorities, but the monitors, styled "iron coffins", proved their worth
+in battle with the river navies. By 1865 fifty-eight of the turreted
+vessels had been built, some of which became seagoing._]
+
+[Illustration: _With untiring vigilance, steam-powered gunboats like
+the_ Mendota _plied the Southern coastline to enforce the blockade
+against Confederate trade with England and France._]
+
+[Illustration: _The C.S.S._ Hunley_, a completely submersible craft, was
+hand-propelled by a crew of eight. The 25-foot submarine sank off
+Charleston along with her first and only victim, the U.S.S._
+Housatonic.]
+
+[Illustration: _Steam-powered torpedo boats of the Confederate Navy were
+capable of partially submerging with only their stacks showing. These
+tiny "Davids", named after the Biblical warrior, could be either manned
+or remotely controlled from shore._]
+
+[Illustration: U.S. Army Uniforms (LIEUT. GENERAL U.S. ARMY. UNDRESS;
+BRIG. GENERAL U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS; COLONEL OF INFANTRY U.S. ARMY. FULL
+DRESS; CAPTAIN OF ARTILLERY U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS)]
+
+[Illustration: U.S. Army Uniforms (MAJOR OF CAVALRY, U.S. ARMY. FULL
+DRESS; LIEUT. COLONEL, SURG., U.S. ARMY. OFFICERS OVERCOAT AND STAFF
+TROWSERS; SERGEANT MAJOR, ARTILLERY, U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS; SERGEANT,
+INFANTRY, U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS)]
+
+[Illustration: U.S. Army Uniforms (PRIVATE, U.S. INFANTRY. FATIGUE
+MARCHING ORDER; CORPORAL, CAVALRY, U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS; PRIVATE, LIGHT
+ARTILLERY, U.S. ARMY. FULL DRESS; GREAT COAT FOR ALL MOUNTED MEN CAVALRY)]
+
+[Illustration: UNITED STATES UNIFORMS IN THE CIVIL WAR (REG. CAVALRY
+PRIVATE. GEN. GRANT'S UNIFORM. ARTILLERY LINE OFFICER. DURYEA'S
+ZOUAVE. HAWKIN'S ZOUAVE. REG. INFANTRY PRIVATE. DURYEA'S ZOUAVE LINE
+OFFICER. CAMPAIGN UNIFORM INFANTRY. REG. ARTILLERY PRIVATE. INFANTRY
+OVERCOAT.)]
+
+[Illustration: CONFEDERATE UNIFORMS (NORTH CAROLINA MILITIA. REG.
+INFANTRY PRIVATE. WASHINGTON ARTILLERY. MONTGOMERY TRUE BLUE. FIELD
+OFFICER OF INFANTRY. GEN. LEE'S UNIFORM. REG. CAVALRY PRIVATE. LOUISIANA
+TIGER. LOUISIANA ZOUAVE. REG. ARTILLERY PRIVATE.)]
+
+[Illustration: C.S. Army Uniforms (GENERAL, C.S. ARMY. COLONEL,
+INFANTRY, C.S. ARMY. COLONEL, ENGINEERS, C.S. ARMY. MAJOR, CAVALRY, C.S.
+ARMY.)]
+
+[Illustration: C.S. Army Uniforms (SURGEON, MAJOR MED. DEPT., C.S. ARMY.
+CAPTAIN, ARTILLERY, C.S. ARMY. FIRST LIEUTENANT INFANTRY, C.S. ARMY.
+SERGEANT, CAVALRY, C.S. ARMY.)]
+
+[Illustration: C.S. Army Uniforms (CORPORAL, ARTILLERY, C.S. ARMY.
+PRIVATE, INFANTRY, C.S. ARMY. INFANTRY, C.S. ARMY. OVERCOAT; CAVALRY,
+C.S. ARMY. OVERCOAT)]
+
+[Illustration: _In 1864 nearly 4,000 wagons traveled with Meade's Army
+of the Potomac, each capable of carrying 2,500 pounds of supplies.
+During one year the Federal Army purchased 14,500 wagons and captured an
+additional 2,000._]
+
+[Illustration: _"The muscles of his brawny arms are strong as
+ironbands...." Union Army blacksmiths had to shoe nearly 500 new horses
+and mules daily._]
+
+[Illustration: _An old timer that traveled many miles of Virginia road
+with a busy and tireless man--General U. S. Grant._]
+
+[Illustration: _General Lee had hoped that Virginia's numerous streams
+and rivers would delay Grant's advance, but Federal engineers with
+portable pontoon bridges kept the army at Lee's heels._]
+
+[Illustration: _This "cornstalk" bridge over Potomac Creek near
+Fredericksburg was built by the Military Railroad construction corps
+from 204,000 feet of standing timber in nine days._]
+
+[Illustration: _In one year (1864-1865) the Federal Military Railroad,
+with 365 engines and 4,203 cars, delivered over 5 million tons of
+supplies to the armies in the field._]
+
+[Illustration: _Schooners piled high with cartridge boxes lie in the
+placid waters off Hampton Roads. In 1865 hundreds of Union troops and
+supplies were moved by ocean transports, chartered at a daily cost of
+$92,000._]
+
+[Illustration: _Federal ships crowd the magazine wharf at City Point
+with equipment and supplies for army wagons from Petersburg. Twenty per
+cent of the total supply tonnage was transported by water._]
+
+[Illustration: CIVIL WAR SMALL ARMS]
+
+[Illustration: CIVIL WAR ARTILLERY]
+
+ _MAXIMUM EFFECTIVE RANGE IN YARDS_
+
+ _12-Pounder Howitzer 1,070_
+ _6 & 12-Pounder Field Guns 1,200_
+ _13-Inch Siege Mortar 3,520_
+ _10-Pounder Parrott Rifle 5,000_
+ _10-Inch Columbiad Siege Gun 5,650_
+ _30-Pounder Parrott Rifle 8,450_
+ _12-Pounder Whitworth Rifle 8,800_
+
+
+ _TYPICAL GUNNER'S TABLE_
+
+ _12-Pounder Field Gun_ _Powder Charge 2.5 lbs._
+
+ _Range (yards)_ _600_ _700_ _800_ _900_ _1,000_ _1,100_ _1,200_
+ _Muzzle Elevation_ _1 deg._ _1 deg.45'_ _2 deg._ _2 deg.15'_ _2 deg.30'_ _3 deg._ _3 deg.30'_
+ _Fuse Setting (sec.)_ _1.75_ _2.50_ _2.75_ _3.00_ _3.25_ _4.00_ _4.50_
+
+[Illustration: _A 15-inch Rodman smoothbore, one of the largest guns
+mounted during the war, stands as a silent sentry guarding the Potomac
+at Alexandria, Virginia._]
+
+[Illustration: _The Parrott Rifle, recognizable by the wrought iron
+jacket reinforcing its breech, was one of the first rifled field guns
+used by the U.S. Army._]
+
+[Illustration: _Moved by special rail to the Petersburg front, the
+13-inch mortar "Dictator" hurled 200-pound exploding shells at the
+Confederate earthworks over two miles away._]
+
+[Illustration: _Curious Federal soldiers inspect a Confederate armored
+gun, the earliest rail artillery on record. This "land ram", designed by
+Lt. John M. Brooke of the Confederate Navy, was first used at Savage
+Station, Virginia, in 1862._]
+
+[Illustration: _Gabions, open-end baskets filled with earth, proved as
+effective as masonary in defensive works. Thousands of these baskets
+were patiently made by hand for use in field and seacoast
+fortifications._]
+
+[Illustration: _Confederate sappers constructed a number of artillery
+emplacements covering the avenues of approach to Atlanta. The guns in
+this fortification overlook famous Peachtree Street._]
+
+[Illustration: _Chevaux-de-frise, made of logs pierced by sharp stakes,
+line the Georgia countryside. Confederate defensive measures such as
+this were effective in stopping cavalry and preventing surprise frontal
+attacks by infantry._]
+
+[Illustration: _The Union military telegraph corps strung more than
+15,000 miles of wire during the war. In one year, the Northern armies
+kept the wires alive with nearly 1.8 million messages. Galvanic
+batteries transported by wagon furnished the electricity._]
+
+[Illustration: _Flag signals from natural elevations and signal towers
+could be seen as far as 20 miles on a clear day. Military information
+was often obtained by signalmen on both sides who copied each others
+flag messages and tapped telegraph lines._]
+
+[Illustration: _Balloon observation on the battlefield was made possible
+by the portable gas generator. Here Professor T.S.C. Lowe's balloon is
+inflated by mobile generators in front of Richmond in 1862._]
+
+[Illustration: _Dodging Confederate shells which whizzed dangerously
+close to the Intrepid, Professor Lowe telegraphed information on
+emplacements directly from his balloon and made sketches of the approach
+routes to Richmond._]
+
+[Illustration: _Faulty intelligence furnished by detective Allan
+Pinkerton (seated in rear) and his agents misled General George
+McClellan during the Peninsula Campaign. The Pinkerton organization was
+later replaced by a more efficient military intelligence bureau._]
+
+[Illustration: _A. D. Lytle, a Baton Rouge photographer, provided
+valuable intelligence to Confederate commanders. His photographs, like
+this one posed by the 1st Indiana Heavy Artillery, revealed the strength
+and condition of Union organizations._]
+
+[Illustration: _Artillerymen soften an objective for the infantry.
+Although field artillery was used extensively, it frightened and
+demoralized more men than it wounded. Only 20 per cent of the battle
+casualties can be attributed to the artillery._]
+
+[Illustration: _Assaults on fortified positions were costly, but here at
+Petersburg war-weary infantrymen await their turn for another charge
+against the Confederate works. Fourteen out of every hundred would
+fall._]
+
+[Illustration: _One of an estimated 584,000 Union and Confederate
+soldiers wounded during the war. Of this number, over 80,000 died._]
+
+[Illustration: _The Union ambulance corps provided one ambulance for
+every 150 men during the Wilderness Campaign. In one convoy of 813
+ambulances, over 7,000 sick and wounded were transported to the hospital
+in Fredericksburg._]
+
+[Illustration: _Amputees, like these Union soldiers who survived the
+surgeon's scalpel, would never forget the traumatic ordeal. Most wounded
+went through surgery while fully conscious with but a little morphine,
+when available, to deaden the pain._]
+
+[Illustration: _A floating palace with bathrooms and laundry, the
+hospital ship_ Red Rover _gave many sick and wounded a better chance for
+life than they would have had in the crowded field hospitals._]
+
+[Illustration: _Carver Hospital, where thousands of stricken soldiers
+recovered. Walt Whitman and Louisa May Alcott nursed many sick and
+wounded in similar Washington hospitals._]
+
+[Illustration: _The much-publicized Andersonville prison. The
+declaration by Union authorities that medicine was a contraband of war
+and their unwillingness to exchange prisoners contributed to the
+deplorable prison deaths. Prisoners didn't fare better in the North.
+Camp Douglas, Illinois, had the highest death rate of all Civil war
+prisons--10 per cent of its prisoners died in one month._]
+
+[Illustration: _Unknown warriors at Cold Harbor awaited a soldier's
+burial that never came. Two years later the armies returned to the same
+field of battle to find those who were forgotten--still waiting._]
+
+[Illustration: _Boys volunteered for a man's job. This Confederate lad
+gave his last full measure._]
+
+[Illustration: _The muffled drum's sad roll has beat
+ The soldier's last tattoo;
+No more on Life's parade shall meet
+ The brave and fallen few.
+
+On Fame's eternal camping-ground
+ Their silent tents are spread
+And Glory guards, with solemn round,
+ The bivouac of the dead._"
+ --_THEODORE O'HARA_]
+
+[Illustration: _Richmond 1865--Gaunt remains cast their shadow over the
+former Confederate capital. The rampaging fire, started during the
+evacuation, leveled the waterfront and the business district._]
+
+[Illustration: _Charleston, South Carolina, shows the scars of modern
+warfare. The concept of total war introduced during the 1860's carried
+destruction beyond the battlefield._]
+
+[Illustration: _The home of Wilmer McLean at Appomattox. Here the
+tragic drama closed at 3:45 on Palm Sunday afternoon, April 9, 1865._]
+
+[Illustration: THE SURRENDER AT APPOMATTOX; BASED UPON THE LITHOGRAPH
+CALLED "THE DAWN OF PEACE." BY PERMISSION OF W. H. STELLE.]
+
+[Illustration: _Pennsylvania Avenue--host to the Armies of Grant and
+Sherman during the Grand Review._]
+
+[Illustration: _The last reunion of Blue and Gray at Gettysburg. The
+victories and the defeats ... they have become a common property and a
+common responsibility of the American people._]
+
+
+Losses in Killed, Wounded, and Missing in Engagements, Etc.,
+
+WHERE THE TOTAL WAS FIVE HUNDRED OR MORE ON THE SIDE OF THE UNION
+TROOPS. CONFEDERATE LOSSES GIVEN ARE GENERALLY BASED ON ESTIMATES.
+
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+-----------------------------+-------
+ | | | |CONFED-
+ | | | UNION LOSS. | ERATE
+ | | | | LOSS.
+ | | +------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ NO.|DATE. | NAME. |Killed|Wounded|Missing| Total| Total
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ | 1861. | | | | | |
+ 1|July 21 |Bull Run, Va. | 481| 1,011| 1,460| 2,952| 1,752
+ 2|Aug 10 |Wilson's Creek, Mo. | 223| 721| 291| 1,235| 1,095
+ 3|Sep 12-20|Lexington, Mo. | 42| 108| 1,624| 1,774| 100
+ 4|Oct 21 |Ball's Bluff, Va. | 223| 226| 445| 894| 302
+ 5|Nov 7 |Belmont, Mo. | 90| 173| 235| 498| 966
+ | | | | | | |
+ | 1862. | | | | | |
+ 6|Feb 14-16|Fort Donelson, Tenn. | 446| 1,735| 150| 2,331| 15,067
+ 7|Mar 6-8 |Pea Ridge, Ark. | 203| 972| 174| 1,349| 5,200
+ 8|Mar 14 |New-Berne, N. C. | 91| 466| ---| 557| 583
+ 9|Mar 23 |Winchester, Va. | 103| 440| 24| 567| 691
+ 10|Apr 6&7 |Shiloh, Tenn. | 1,735| 7,882| 3,956|13,573| 10,699
+ 11|May 5 |Williamsburg, Va. | 456| 1,400| 372| 2,228| 1,000
+ 12|May 23 |Front Royal, Va. | 32| 122| 750| 904| ---
+ 13|May 25 |Winchester, Va. | 38| 155| 711| 904| ---
+ 14|May 31- |Seven Pines and Fair | | | | |
+ Jun 1 | Oaks, Va. | 890| 3,627| 1,222| 5,739| 7,997
+ 15|Jun 8 |Cross Keys, Va. | 125| 500| ---| 625| 287
+ 16|Jun 9 |Fort Republic, Va. | 67| 361| 574| 1,002| 657
+ 17|Jun 16 |Secessionville, James | | | | |
+ | | Island, S. C. | 85| 472| 128| 685| 204
+ 18|Jun 25 |Oak Grove, Va. | 51| 401| 64| 516| 541
+ 19|Jun 26- |Seven days' retreat; | | | | |
+ | Jul 1 | includes Mechanics- | | | | |
+ | | ville, Gaines' Mills,| | | | |
+ | | Chickahominy, Peach | | | | |
+ | | Orchard, Savage | | | | |
+ | | Station, Charles City| | | | |
+ | | Cross Roads, and | | | | |
+ | | Malvern Hill | 1,582| 7,709| 5,958|15,249| 17,583
+ 20|Jul 13 |Murfreesboro', Tenn. | 33| 62| 800| 895| 150
+ 21|Aug 8 |Cedar Mountain, Va. | 450| 660| 290| 1,400| 1,307
+ 22|Jul 20- |Guerrilla campaign in | | | | |
+ | Sep 20 | Missouri; includes | | | | |
+ | | Porter's and Poindex-| | | | |
+ | | ter's Guerrillas | 77| 156| 347| 580| 2,866
+ 23|Aug 28&29|Groveton and | | | | |
+ | | Gainesville, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 7,000| 7,000
+ 24|Aug 30 |Bull Run, Va. (2d) | 800| 4,000| 3,000| 7,800| 3,700
+ 25|Aug 30 |Richmond Ky. | 200| 700| 4,000| 4,900| 750
+ 26|Sep 1 |Chantilly, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 1,300| 800
+ 27|Sep 12-15|Harper's Ferry, Va. | 80| 120| 11,583|11,783| 500
+ 28|Sep 14 |Turner's and Crampton's| | | | |
+ | | Gaps, South Mountain,| | | | |
+ | | Md. | 443| 1,806| 76| 2,325| 4,343
+ 29|Sep 14-16|Munfordsville Ky. | 50| ---| 3,566| 3,616| 714
+ 30|Sep 17 |Antietam, Md. | 2,010| 9,416| 1,043|12,469| 25,899
+ 31|Sep 19-20|Iuka, Miss. | 144| 598| 40| 782| 1,516
+ 32|Oct 3&4 |Corinth, Miss. | 315| 1,812| 232| 2,359| 14,221
+ 33|Oct 5 |Big Hatchie River, | | | | |
+ | | Miss. | ---| ---| ---| 500| 400
+ 34|Oct 8 |Perryville, Ky. | 916| 2,943| 489| 4,348| 7,000
+ 35|Dec 7 |Prairie Grove, Ark. | 167| 798| 183| 1,148| 1,500
+ 36|Dec 7 |Hartsville, Tenn. | 55| ---| 1,800| 1,855| 149
+ 37|Dec 12-18|Foster's expedition to | | | | |
+ | | Goldsboro', N.C. | 90| 478| 9| 577| 739
+ 38|Dec 13 |Fredericksburg, Va. | 1,180| 9,028| 2,145|12,353| 4,576
+ 39|Dec 20 |Holly Springs, Miss. | ---| ---| 1,000| 1,000| ---
+ 40|Dec 27 |Elizabethtown, Ky. | ---| ---| 500| 500| ---
+ 41|Dec 28&29|Chickasaw Bayou, | | | | |
+ | | Vicksburg, Miss. | 191| 982| 756| 1,929| 207
+ 42|Dec 31- |Stone's River, Tenn. | | | | |
+ | Jan 2 | | 1,533| 7,245| 2,800|11,578| 25,560
+ | | | | | | |
+ | 1863. | | | | | |
+ 43|Jan 1 |Galveston, Texas | ---| ---| 600| 600| 50
+ 44|Jan 11 |Fort Hindman, Arkansas | | | | |
+ | | Post, Ark. | 129| 831| 17| 977| 5,500
+ 45|Mar 4&5 |Thompson's Station, | | | | |
+ | | Tenn. | 100| 300| 1,306| 1,706| 600
+ 46|Apr 27- |Streight's raid from | | | | |
+ | May 3 | Tuscumbia, Ala., to | | | | |
+ | | Rome, Ga. | 12| 69| 1,466| 1,547| ---
+ 47|May 1 |Port Gibson, Miss. | 130| 718| 5| 853| 1,650
+ 48|May 1-4 |Chancellorsville, Va. | 1,512| 9,518| 5,000|16,030| 12,281
+ 49|May 16 |Champion Mills, Miss. | 426| 1,842| 189| 2,457| 4,300
+ 50|May 18- |Siege of Vicksburg, | | | | |
+ | Jul 4 | Miss. | 545| 3,688| 303| 4,536| 31,277
+ 51|May 27- |Siege of Port Hudson, | | | | |
+ | Jul 9 | La. | 500| 2,500| ---| 3,000| 7,208
+ 52|Jun 6-8 |Milliken's Bend, La. | 154| 223| 115| 492| 725
+ 53|Jun 9 |Beverly Ford and Brandy| | | | |
+ | | Station, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 500| 700
+ 54|Jun 13-15|Winchester, Va. | ---| ---| 3,000| 3,000| 850
+ 55|Jun 23-30|Rosecrans' campaign | | | | |
+ | | from Murfreesboro' | | | | |
+ | | to Tullahoma, Tenn. | 85| 462| 13| 560| 1,634
+ 56|July 1-3 |Gettysburg, Pa. | 2,834| 13,709| 6,643|23,186| 31,621
+ 57|July 9-16|Jackson, Miss. | 100| 800| 100| 1,000| 1,339
+
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+-----------------------------+-------
+ | | | |CONFED-
+ | | | UNION LOSS. | ERATE
+ | | | | LOSS.
+ | | +------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ NO.|DATE. | NAME. |Killed|Wounded|Missing| Total| Total
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ 58|Jul 18 |Second assault on Fort | | | | |
+ | | Wagner, S. C | ---| ---| ---| 1,500| 174
+ 59|Sep 19-20|Chickamauga, Ga. | 1,644| 9,262| 4,945|15,851| 17,804
+ 60|Nov 3 |Grand Coteau, La. | 26| 124| 576| 726| 445
+ 61|Nov 6 |Rogersville, Tenn. | 5| 12| 650| 667| 30
+ 62|Nov 23-25|Chattanooga, Tenn.; | | | | |
+ | | includes Orchard | | | | |
+ | | Knob, Lookout | | | | |
+ | | Mountain, and | | | | |
+ | | Missionary Ridge. | 757| 4,529| 330| 5,616| 8,684
+ 63|Nov 26-28|Operations at Mine Run,| | | | |
+ | | Va. | 100| 400| ---| 500| 500
+ 64|Dec 14 |Bean's Station, Tenn. | ---| ---| ---| 700| 900
+ | | | | | | |
+ | 1864. | | | | | |
+ 65|Feb 20 |Olustee, Fla. | 193| 1,175| 460| 1,828| 500
+ 66|Apr 8 |Sabine Cross Roads, La.| 200| 900| 1,800| 2,900| 1,500
+ 67|Apr 9 |Pleasant Hills, La. | 100| 700| 300| 1,100| 2,000
+ 68|Apr 12 |Fort Pillow, Tenn. | 350| 60| 164| 574| 80
+ 69|Apr 17-20|Plymouth, N. C. | 20| 80| 1,500| 1,600| 500
+ 70|Apr 30 |Jenkins' Ferry, Saline | | | | |
+ | | River, Ark. | 200| 955| ---| 1,155| 1,100
+ 71|May 5-7 |Wilderness, Va. | 5,597| 21,463| 10,677|37,737| 11,400
+ 72|May 5-9 |Rocky Face Ridge, Ga.; | | | | |
+ | | includes Tunnel Hill,| | | | |
+ | | Mill Creek Gap, | | | | |
+ | | Buzzard Roost, Snake | | | | |
+ | | Creek Gap, and near | | | | |
+ | | Dalton | 200| 637| --- | 837| 600
+ 73|May 8-18 |Spottsylvania Court | | | | |
+ | | House, Va.; includes | | | | |
+ | | engagements on the | | | | |
+ | | Fredericksburg Road, | | | | |
+ | | Laurel Hill, and Nye | | | | |
+ | | River | 4,177| 19,687| 2,577|26,461| 9,000
+ 74|May 9-10 |Swift Creek, Va. | 90| 400| ---| 490| 500
+ 75|May 9-10 |Cloyd's Mountain and | | | | |
+ | |New River Bridge, Va. | 126| 585| 34| 745| 900
+ 76|May 12-16|Fort Darling, Drewry's | | | | |
+ | | Bluff, Va. | 422| 2,380| 210| 3,012| 2,500
+ 77|May 13-16|Resaca, Ga. | 600| 2,147| ---| 2,747| 2,800
+ 78|May 15 |New Market, Va. | 120| 560| 240| 920| 405
+ 79|May 16-30|Bermuda Hundred, Va. | 200| 1,000| ---| 1,200| 3,000
+ 80|May 23-27|North Anna River, Va. | 223| 1,460| 290| 1,973| 2,000
+ 81|May 25- |Dallas, Ga. | | | | |
+ | Jun 4 | | ---| ---| ---| 2,400| 3,000
+ 82|Jun 1-12 |Cold Harbor, Va. | 1,905| 10,570| 2,456|14,931| 1,700
+ 83|Jun 5 |Piedmont, Va. | 130| 650| ---| 780| 2,970
+ 84|Jun 9-30 |Kenesaw Mountain, Ga.; | | | | |
+ | | includes Pine | | | | |
+ | | Mountain, Pine Knob, | | | | |
+ | | Golgotha, Culp's | | | | |
+ | | House, general | | | | |
+ | | assault, Jun 27th: | | | | |
+ | | McAfee's Cross Roads,| | | | |
+ | | Lattemore's Mills | | | | |
+ | | and Powder Springs | 1,370| 6,500| 800| 8,670| 4,600
+ 85|Jun 10 |Brice's Cross Roads, | | | | |
+ | | near Guntown, Miss. | 223| 394| 1,623| 2,240| 606
+ 86|Jun 10 |Kellar's Bridge, | | | | |
+ | | Licking River, Ky. | 13| 54| 700| 767| ---
+ 87|Jun 11-12|Trevellian Station, | | | | |
+ | | Central Railroad, Va.| 85| 490| 160| 735| 370
+ 88|Jun 15-19|Petersburg, Va.; | | | | |
+ | | includes Baylor's | | | | |
+ | | Farm, Walthal, and | | | | |
+ | | Weir Bottom Church | 1,298| 7,474| 1,814|10,586| ---
+ 89|Jun 17&18|Lynchburg, Va. | 100| 500| 400| 700| 200
+ 90|Jun 20-30|Trenches in front of | | | | |
+ | | Petersburg, Va. | 112| 506| 800| 1,418| ---
+ 91|Jun 22-30|Wilson's raid on the | | | | |
+ | | Weldon Railroad, Va. | 76| 265| 700| 1,041| 300
+ 92|Jun 22-23|Weldon Railroad, Va. | 604| 2,494| 2,217| 5,315| 500
+ 93|Jun 27 |Kenesaw Mountain, | | | | |
+ | | general assault. | | | | |
+ | | See No. 2,345 | ---| ---| ---| 3,000| 608
+ 94|Jul 1-31 |Front of Petersburg, | | | | |
+ | | Va.; losses at the | | | | |
+ | | Crater and Deep | | | | |
+ | | Bottom not included | 419| 2,076| 1,200| 3,695| ---
+ 95|Jul 6-10 |Chattahoochee River, | | | | |
+ | | Ga. | 80| 450| 200| 730| 600
+ 96|Jul 9 |Monocacy, Md. | 90| 579| 1,290| 1,959| 400
+ 97|Jul 13-15|Tupelo, Miss.; includes| | | | |
+ | | Harrisburg and Old | | | | |
+ | | Town Creek | 85| 563| ---| 648| 700
+ 98|Jul 20 |Peach Tree Creek, Ga. | 300| 1,410| ---| 1,710| 4,796
+ 99|Jul 22 |Atlanta, Ga.; Hood's | | | | |
+ | | first sortie | 500| 2,141| 1,000| 3,641| 8,499
+ 100|Jul 24 |Winchester, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 1,200| 600
+ 101|Jul 26-31|Stoneman's raid to | | | | |
+ | | Macon, Ga. | ---| 100| 900| 1,000| ---
+ 102|Jul 26-31|McCook's raid to | | | | |
+ | | Lovejoy Station, Ga. | ---| 100| 500| 600| ---
+ 103|Jul 28 |Ezra Chapel, Atlanta, | | | | |
+ | | Ga.; second sortie. | 100| 600| ---| 700| 4,642
+ 104|Jul 30 |Mine explosion at | | | | |
+ | | Petersburg, Va. | 419| 1,679| 1,910| 4,008| 1,200
+ 105|Aug 1-31 |Trenches before | | | | |
+ | | Petersburg, Va. | 87| 484| ---| 571| ---
+ 106|Aug 14-18|Strawberry Plains, Deep| | | | |
+ | | Bottom Run, Va. | 400| 1,755| 1,400| 3,555| 1,100
+ 107|Aug 18, |Six Mile House, Weldon | | | | |
+ | 19&21 | Railroad, Va. | 212| 1,155| 3,176| 4,543| 4,000
+ 108|Aug 21 |Summit Point, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 600| 400
+ 109|Aug 25 |Ream's Station, Va. | 127| 546| 1,769| 2,442| 1,500
+ 110|Aug 31- |Jonesboro', Ga. | | | | |
+ | Sep 1 | | ---| 1,149| ---| 1,149| 2,000
+ 111|May 5- |Campaign in Northern | | | | |
+ | Sep 8 | Georgia, from | | | | |
+ | | Chattanooga, Tenn., | | | | |
+ | | to Atlanta, Ga. | 5,284| 26,129| 5,786|37,199| ---
+ 112|Sep 1- |Trenches before | | | | |
+ | Oct 30 | Petersburg, Va. | 170| 822| 812| 1,804| 1,000
+ 113|Sep 19 |Opequan, Winchester, | | | | |
+ | | Va. | 653| 3,719| 618| 4,990| 5,500
+ 114|Sep 23 |Athens, Ala. | ---| ---| 950| 950| 30
+ 115|Sep 24- |Price's invasion of | | | | |
+ | Oct 28 | Missouri; includes a | | | | |
+ | | number of engagements| 170| 336| ---| 506| ---
+ 116|Sep 28-30|New Market Heights, Va.| 400| 2,029| ---| 2,429| 2,000
+ 117|Sep 30- |Preble's Farm, Poplar | | | | |
+ | Oct 1 |Springs Church, Va. | 141| 788| 1,756| 2,685| 900
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+-----------------------------+-------
+ | | | |CONFED-
+ | | | UNION LOSS. | ERATE
+ | | | | LOSS.
+ | | +------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ NO.|DATE. | NAME. |Killed|Wounded|Missing| Total| Total
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+------+-------+-------+------+-------
+ 118|Oct 5 |Allatoona, Ga. | 142| 352| 212| 706| 1,142
+ 119|Oct 19 |Cedar Creek, Va. | 588| 3,516| 1,891| 5,995| 4,200
+ 120|Oct 27 |Hatcher's Run, South | | | | |
+ | | Side Railroad, Va. | 156| 1,047| 699| 1,902| 1,000
+ 121|Oct 27&28|Fair Oaks, near | | | | |
+ | | Richmond, Va. | 120| 783| 400| 1,303| 451
+ 122|Nov 28 |Fort Kelly, New Creek, | | | | |
+ | | West Va. | ---| ---| 700| 700| 5
+ 123|Nov 30 |Franklin, Tenn. | 189| 1,033| 1,104| 2,326| 6,252
+ 124|Nov 30 |Honey Hill, Broad | | | | |
+ | | River, S. C. | 66| 645| ---| 711| ---
+ 125|Dec 6-9 |Deveaux's Neck, S. C. | 39| 390| 200| 629| 400
+ 126|Dec 15&16|Nashville, Tenn. | 400| 1,740| ---| 2,140| 15,000
+ | | | | | | |
+ | 1865. | | | | | |
+ 127|Jan 11 |Beverly, West Va. | 5| 20| 583| 608| ---
+ 128|Jan 13-15|Fort Fisher, N. C. | 184| 749| 22| 955| 2,483
+ 129|Feb 5-7 |Dabney's Mills, | | | | |
+ | | Hatcher's Run, Va. | 232| 1,062| 186| 1,480| 1,200
+ 130|Mar 8-10 |Wilcox's Bridge, Wise's| | | | |
+ | | Fork, N. C. | 80| 421| 600| 1,101| 1,500
+ 131|Mar 16 |Averysboro', N. C. | 77| 477| ---| 554| 865
+ 132|Mar 19-21|Bentonville, N. C. | 191| 1,168| 287| 1,646| 2,825
+ 133|Mar 25 |Fort Steedman, in front| | | | |
+ | | of Petersburg, Va. | 68| 337| 506| 911| 2,681
+ 134|Mar 25 |Petersburg, Va. | 103| 864| 209| 1,176| 834
+ 135|Mar 26- |Spanish Fort, Ala. | | | | |
+ | Apr 8 | | 100| 695| ---| 795| 552
+ 136|Mar 22- |Wilson's raid from | 99| 598| 28| 725| 8,020
+ | Apr 24 | Chickasaw, Ala., to | | | | |
+ | | Macon, Ga.; includes | | | | |
+ | | a number of | | | | |
+ | | engagements | | | | |
+ 137|Mar 31 |Boydton and White Oak | | | | |
+ | | Roads, Va. | 177| 1,134| 556| 1,867| 1,235
+ 138|Apr 1 |Five Forks, Va. | 124| 706| 54| 884| 8,500
+ 139|Apr 2 |Fall of Petersburg, Va.| 296| 2,565| 500| 3,361| 3,000
+ 140|Apr 6 |Sailor's Creek, Va. | 166| 1,014| ---| 1,180| 7,000
+ 141|Apr 6 |High Bridge, Appomattox| | | | |
+ | | River, Va. | 10| 31| 1,000| 1,041| ---
+ 142|Apr 7 |Farmville, Va. | ---| ---| ---| 655| ---
+ 143|Apr 9 |Fort Blakely, Ala. | 113| 516| ---| 629| 2,900
+ 144|Apr 9 |Surrender of Lee | ---| ---| ---| ---| 26,000
+ 145|Apr 26 |Johnston surrendered | ---| ---| ---| ---| 29,924
+ 146|May 4 |Taylor surrendered | ---| ---| ---| ---| 10,000
+ 147|May 10 |Sam Jones surrendered | ---| ---| ---| ---| 8,000
+ 148|May 11 |Jeff Thompson | | | | |
+ | | surrendered | ---| ---| ---| ---| 7,454
+ 149|May 26 |Kirby Smith surrendered| ---| ---| ---| ---| 20,000
+ ---+---------+-----------------------+------+-------+-------+------+-------
+
+
+ Statement of the Number of Engagements
+
+IN THE SEVERAL STATES AND TERRITORIES DURING EACH YEAR OF THE WAR.
+
+ ------------------+------+------+------+------+------+------
+ STATES AND | | | | | |
+ TERRITORIES. |=1861=|=1862=|=1863=|=1864=|=1865=| Total
+ ------------------+------+------+------+------+------+------
+ New York | ---| ---| 1| ---| ---| 1
+ Pennsylvania | ---| ---| 8| 1| ---| 9
+ Maryland | 3| 9| 10| 8| ---| 30
+ Dist. of Columbia | ---| ---| ---| 1| ---| 1
+ West Virginia | 29| 114| 17| 19| 1| 80
+ Virginia | 30| 40| 116| 205| 28| 519
+ North Carolina | 2| 27| 18| 10| 28| 85
+ South Carolina | 2| 10| 17| 9| 22| 60
+ Georgia | ---| 2| 8| 92| 6| 108
+ Florida | 3| 3| 4| 17| 5| 32
+ Alabama | ---| 10| 12| 32| 24| 78
+ Mississippi | ---| 42| 76| 67| 1| 186
+ Louisiana | 1| 11| 54| 50| 2| 118
+ Texas | 1| 2| 8| 1| 2| 14
+ Arkansas | 1| 42| 40| 78| 6| 167
+ Tennessee | 2| 82| 124| 89| 1| 298
+ Kentucky | 14| 59| 30| 31| 4| 138
+ Ohio | ---| ---| 3| ---| ---| 3
+ Indiana | ---| ---| 4| ---| ---| 4
+ Illinois | ---| ---| ---| 1| ---| 1
+ Missouri | 65| 95| 43| 41| ---| 244
+ Minnesota | ---| 5| 1| ---| ---| 6
+ California | ---| 1| 4| 1| ---| 6
+ Kansas | ---| ---| 2| 5| ---| 7
+ Oregon | ---| ---| ---| 3| 1| 4
+ Nevada | ---| ---| ---| 2| ---| 2
+ Washington Ter. | ---| ---| 1| ---| ---| 1
+ Utah | ---| ---| 1| ---| ---| 1
+ New Mexico | 3| 5| 7| 4| ---| 19
+ Nebraska | ---| ---| 2| ---| ---| 2
+ Colorado | ---| ---| ---| 4| ---| 4
+ Indian Territory | ---| 2| 9| 3| 3| 17
+ Dakota | ---| 2| 5| 4| ---| 11
+ Arizona | ---| 1| 1| 1| 1| 4
+ Idaho | ---| ---| 1| ---| ---| 1
+ +------+------+------+------+------+------
+ | 156| 564| 627| 779| 135| 2,261
+ ------------------+------+------+---- -+------+------+------
+
+[Illustration: BATTLE FIELDS OF THE GREAT CIVIL WAR]
+
+
+
+
+
+ RECOMMENDED READING
+
+
+ Civil War in the Making: 1815-1860--_Avery O. Craven_
+ The Coming of the Civil War--_Avery O. Craven_
+ The Irrepressible Conflict--_Arthur C. Cole_
+
+
+ West Point Atlas of American Wars, 2 vols.--_Vincent J.
+ Esposito_
+ The Story of the Confederacy--_Robert Selph Henry_
+ Storm Over the Land: A Profile of the Civil War--_Carl Sandburg_
+ The Confederate States of America--_E. Merton Coulter_
+ The Compact History of the Civil War--_R. Ernest and Trevor N.
+ Dupuy_
+ The Civil War and Reconstruction--_James G. Randall_
+
+ The Blue and the Gray--_Henry Steele Commager_
+ The Common Soldier in the Civil War--_Bell Irvin Wiley_
+ They Fought for the Union--_Francis A. Lord_
+ Spies for the Blue and Gray--_Harnett Kane_
+
+ Battles and Leaders, 4 vols.--_Robert Johnson and Clarence Buel,
+ ed._
+ The Civil War at Sea--_Virgil Carrington Jones_
+ Lee's Lieutenants, 3 vols.--_Douglas Southall Freeman_
+ R.E. Lee, 4 vols.--_Douglas Southall Freeman_
+ Mr. Lincoln's Army--_Bruce Catton_
+ Glory Road--_Bruce Catton_
+ Stillness at Appomattox--_Bruce Catton_
+ This Hallowed Ground--_Bruce Catton_
+ The Generalship of U.S. Grant--_J.F.C. Fuller_
+ Sherman--Soldier, Realist, American--_B.H. Lidell Hart_
+ Stonewall Jackson: A Study in Command--_G.F.R. Henderson_
+ The Civil War: A Soldier's View--_Jay Luvaas, ed._
+ As They Saw Forrest--_Robert Selph Henry, ed._
+ The Army of the Tennessee--_Stanley Horne_
+ Lincoln's Plan for Reconstruction--_William B. Hesseltine_
+ Lincoln's War Cabinet--_Burton J. Hendrick_
+ Organization and Administration of the Union Army, 2
+ vols.--_Frederick A. Shannon_
+ War Department 1861--_Alfred H. Meneely_
+ Rebel Brass: The Confederate Command System--_Frank E. Vandiver_
+ Jefferson Davis--_Hudson Strode_
+
+
+ Photographic History of the Civil War, 10 vols.--_Francis T.
+ Miller and Robert Lanier, ed._
+ American Heritage Picture History of the Civil War--_Bruce
+ Catton, ed._
+ Divided We Fought--_Hirst Milhollen, Milton Kaplan, Hulen
+ Stuart_
+
+ Notes on U.S. Ordnance, 2 vols.--_James E. Hicks_
+ U.S. Muskets, Rifles, and Carbines--_Arcadi Gluckman_
+ Firearms of the Confederacy--_Claud Fuller and Richard Stuart_
+
+
+
+
+ CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL PROCLAMATION
+ No. 3882
+
+ BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
+ A PROCLAMATION
+
+
+The years 1961-1965 will mark the one hundredth anniversary of the
+American Civil War.
+
+That war was America's most tragic experience. But like all truly great
+tragedies, it carries with it an enduring lesson and a profound
+inspiration. It was a demonstration of heroism and sacrifice by men and
+women of both sides, who valued principle above life itself and whose
+devotion to duty is a proud part of our national inheritance.
+
+Both sections of our magnificently reunited country sent into their
+armies men who became soldiers as good as any who ever fought under any
+flag. Military history records nothing finer than the courage and spirit
+displayed at such battles as Chickamauga, Antietam, Kenesaw Mountain and
+Gettysburg. That America could produce men so valiant and so enduring is
+a matter for deep and abiding pride.
+
+The same spirit on the part of the people back home supported those
+soldiers through four years of great trial. That a Nation which
+contained hardly more than 30 million people, North and South together,
+could sustain 600,000 deaths without faltering is a lasting testimonial
+to something unconquerable in the American spirit. And that a
+transcending sense of unity and larger common purpose could, in the end,
+cause the men and women who had suffered so greatly to close ranks once
+the contest ended and to go on together to build a greater, freer and
+happier America must be a source of inspiration as long as our country
+may last.
+
+By a joint resolution approved on September 7, 1957, the Congress
+established the Civil War Centennial Commission to coordinate the
+nationwide observances of the one hundredth anniversary of the Civil
+War. This resolution authorized and requested the President to issue
+proclamations inviting the people of the United States to participate in
+those observances.
+
+NOW THEREFORE, I, DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER, President of the United States
+of America, do hereby invite all of the people of our country to take a
+direct and active part in the Centennial of the Civil War.
+
+I request all units and agencies of government, Federal, State and
+local, and their officials, to encourage, foster and participate in
+Centennial observances. And I especially urge our Nation's schools and
+colleges, its libraries and museums, its churches and religious bodies,
+its civic, service and patriotic organizations, its learned and
+professional societies, its arts, sciences and industries, and its
+informational media, to plan and carry out their own appropriate
+Centennial observances during the years 1961 to 1965; all to the end of
+enriching our knowledge and appreciation of this great chapter in our
+Nation's history and of making this memorable period truly a Centennial
+for all Americans.
+
+IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the Seal of
+the United States of America to be affixed.
+
+ DONE at the City of Washington this 6th day of December in the
+ year of our Lord nineteen hundred and sixty, and of the
+ Independence of the United States of America the one hundred
+ and eighty-fourth.
+
+ By the President:
+
+ Dwight D. Eisenhower
+
+
+ABOUT THE AUTHOR
+
+William H. Price is a pursuer of the lesser-known, but important, facts
+about the Civil War; an interest that is reflected throughout this
+unique handbook. Living in Northern Virginia, he has been over many
+square miles of the battlefields on foot and, often with a surveyor's
+transit, has plotted key sites and troop positions left obscure in the
+records of the armies. He specializes in the smaller, yet significant
+battles fought in Virginia--First Manassas, Cedar Mountain, Brandy
+Station--and in the operations of the signals services and topographical
+engineers. Modern data-processing techniques were applied to the Civil
+War for the first time when he devised a new method of cataloguing the
+war's battles, skirmishes, and engagements; this compilation, prepared
+by International Business Machines Corporation, is being used by the
+National and State Commissions in planning the numerous Civil War
+Centennial events.
+
+Virgil Carrington Jones, biographer of Ranger Mosby and author of "The
+Civil War at Sea", has best and most accurately described Mr. Price as
+"a walking encyclopedia of Civil War lore".
+
+A native of North Carolina, he has served on the staff of the American
+Military Institute and is a member of the Civil War Centennial
+Commission of the District of Columbia.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Research indicates that the copyright was not renewed.
+
+Page 18: Corrected Gary to Gray "Gray and Blue CWRT"
+
+Page 19: Changed WISCONSIN (1) to WISCONSIN (2)
+
+Page 20: Changed Shenanhoah to Shenandoah
+
+Page 27: Changed 1960s to 1860s "for the Shamrock Regiment of the
+1860's"
+
+Page 32: Corrected spelling of "wariors" to "warriors"
+
+Page 67: Abbreviated dates to narrow the table
+
+Page 71: Corrected spelling of "Irrepressable" to "Irrepressible
+Conflict"
+
+Text uses both ironclad and iron-clad
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Civil War Centennial Handbook, by
+William H. Price
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL HANDBOOK ***
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