Part 2. Western Theater
Transcription
Part 2. Western Theater
A Guide to the Microfiche Edition of (mm wm mmk Part 2. Western Theater University Publications of America Cover: Sketch of Battle of Chancellorsville, May 2, 1863. Courtesy of Library of Congress. A Guide to the Microfiche Edition of CIVIL WAR BATTLES AND CAMPAIGNS Official Histories and Personal Narratives Part 2. Western Theater Project Editor: Robert E. Lester Guide Compiled by: Blair D. Hydrick Robert E. Lester A microfiche project of UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA An Imprint of CIS 4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Civil War battles and campaigns [microform] / project editor: Robert E. Lester, microfiches. Accompanied by a printed guide compiled by Blair D. Hydrick with title: A guide to the microfiche edition of Civil War battles and campaigns. Contents: pt. 1. Eastern theater: official histories and personal narratives, pt. 2. Western theater : official histories and personal narratives. ISBN 1-55655-590-3 1. United States•History•Civil War, 1861-1865•CampaignsSources. 2. United States•History•Civil War, 1861-1865• Campaigns•Personal narratives. I. Lester, Robert. II. Hydrick, Blair. III. University Publications of America (Firm) IV. Title: Guide to the microfiche edition of Civil War battles and campaigns. E470 973.7'3•dc21 96-48360 CIP Copyright ® 1998 by University Publications of America. All rights reserved. ISBN 1-55655-590-3. TABLE OF CONTENTS Scope and Content Note v Arrangement of Material ¡x List of Contributing Institutions xi Source Note xiii Editorial Note xiii Fiche Index Western Theater General References Grierson's Raid Mississippi Valley Morgan's Raid (July 1863) Sherman's Campaign Alabama Mobile Selma Arkansas Pea Ridge Prairie Grove Georgia General References Allatoona Andrews' Railroad Raid Atlanta Chickamauga Chickamauga•Memorials Columbus Fort Pulaski Kenesaw Mountain Mountain Campaign Savannah Sherman's March to the Sea 1 2 2 2 3 4 5 5 5 5 5 6 7 8 8 10 10 10 10 10 10 /// Kansas Quantrell's Lawrence Raid Louisiana General References New Orleans Port Hudson Red River Campaign Mississippi Vicksburg Vicksburg•Memorials Missouri General References Belmont Lexington Palmyra Pilot Knob Price's Raid Westport Wilson's Creek New Mexico Fort Fillmore Tennessee Chattanooga Chattanooga•Memorials East Tennessee Campaign, 1863 Fort Pillow Forts Henry and Donelson Franklin Hood's Tennessee Campaign Nashville Shiloh Shiloh•Memorials Stones River Tennessee River Campaign of 1862 Trans-Mississippi General References 10 11 11 11 12 12 14 15 16 16 16 16 16 17 17 17 17 19 19 19 19 20 20 20 20 22 23 23 24 Author Index 25 Major Engagements Index 29 IV SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE The Civil War has been regarded by scholars, students, and history buffs as one of the most important, influential, and compelling events in American history. Individually and collectively, these battle and campaign histories and personal narratives constitute a source of great historical value. These accounts, compiled both during the war and afterward (through 1930), chronicle the "first modern war" and its legacy of "war is hell" and war for a "noble cause." Civil War Battles and Campaigns encompasses the official and literary battle and campaign histories and personal narratives (of specific battles) listed in Charles E. Dornbusch's Military Bibliography of the Civil War, Volume III. UPA has included a large number of items gleaned from a variety of other sources, including the National Union Catalog, other Civil War bibliographies, and Civil War holding lists and card files from various libraries and institutions. Authors of these histories and narratives consist of veteran officers and private soldiers-turned-writers, espousing their perceptions of the battlefield for local veterans organizations and/or small-town publishers; and scholars and "distinguished men" of the era, writing justifications and indictments of the war, its battlefields, barbarism, and memorials. In addition, histories relating to the Western Theater include a variety of accounts on "riverine" warfare. This unique form of warfare, mastered by Union forces, led to the fracturing of the Confederacy along the Tennessee, Mississippi, Cumberland, and Red rivers. These tomes provide a wealth of detail on the clash of the armies, confrontation between generals and privates, strategy and tactics, and the events leading to the final outcome. The personal narratives provide information on the personal level of combat. They poignantly recount the death and destruction as seen from the battlefield•the lying in wait for the attack, the shelling from the enemy's guns, personal combat•brother against brother, father against son, family against family. These are more than just dry accounts of troop movements and engagements. Many are detailed accounts of the daily events in a campaign, the growing casualty lists, accounts of the commencement of battle and the rising tide of the fierceness and fury of the fight. The noise of the cannonading was deafening and continuous. How anxiously we strained our eyes to catch the various movements, thoughtless of everything but the spectacle unfolding.... [N]ow and then there would be a fierce rush into the open prospect of contested ground, a gallant charge on one side and a retreat on the other.... [relates to the moment before the Union army breaks into open rout during the First Battle of Bull Run] The Civil War was not fought in one arena between two contending forces. Rather, operations were conducted in three distinct theaters: the East, extending from the Atlantic to the Appalachian Mountains; the West, stretching from the windward side of the Appalachians to the Mississippi; and the Trans-Mississippi West, consisting of the sparsely populated territories and states of the far west. (UPA has combined the latter two theaters into one.) Until the 1864 advent of coordinated campaigns by Union Generals Grant and Sherman, military operations in one theater had little bearing on or relationship to army movements elsewhere. This publication has been divided into three sections. They are: Part 1. Eastern Theater; Part 2. Western Theater; and Part 3. General References and Collected Works. The Eastern Theater includes the operations of the Union armies of the Potomac, Virginia, James, Shenandoah, and West Virginia and covers the states of Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Florida. Operations by the Confederate army of Northern Virginia and its various corps are highlighted. (Generally Union armies were named after a major river in an operational area, while Confederate armies were designated by regions or states, but there are exceptions.) There are a few histories on a little known military operation by invading Confederate raiders and Canadian sympathizers against the town of St. Albans, Vermont. The Western Theater includes operations by all the various western and trans-Mississippi armies. These include the Union Army of the Cumberland, of the Ohio, of the Tennessee, of the Gulf, and of Georgia. Operations by the Confederate armies of Tennessee, Mississippi, the West, and the Southwest are also highlighted. The Western Theater includes the midwestern states of Ohio and Indiana; the "middle south" states of Kentucky and Tennessee; and the Deep South, consisting of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia. Trans-Mississippi states include Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, and New Mexico. Within each theater the histories are arranged by state, then alphabetically by battle name. Several states have a general references section that includes histories that describe several operations in a state and/or describe the war in the particular theater of operations. Generally, Northerners referred to battles by the closest stream or river, such as Bull Run and Stones River. In contrast, southerners tended to name battles after the nearest community, such as Manassas and Pittsburgh Landing. But, quite often, both sides used the same designation for an engagement. Chickamauga, Gettysburg, and The Wilderness are a few examples. The Civil War was the most traumatic experience in the life of the American Republic. No other chapter in America's history has contributed so much to our literary heritage and folklore. The very words•whether they are the Civil War, War of the Rebellion, or War Between the States•conjure up a hundred images: Jackson "standing like a stonewall"; Lee astride Traveller; Sherman looking out over Georgia and uttering "it is well war is so terrible, or we would get too fond of it"; the massed confusion of soldiers and spectators fleeing the afternoon battle scene at Bull Run; Barbara Fritchie waving the Union flag out of her window while Jackson's troops march through the streets of Frederick; Confederate VI General A. P. Hill breaking through the wheat fields at Antietam; Union General Thomas "standing like a rock" at Chickamauga; Confederate General Pickett's troops streaming up the long slope of Cemetery Ridge into the Union cannonade; the soldiers of the Army of the Cumberland scrambling up the rugged heights of Missionary Ridge; Confederate General Hood taking the lead in closing the gap at Spotsylvania; Sheridan dashing up and down the Winchester Pike; and Grant and Lee at Appomattox Court House. The volumes in this publication will further illuminate the crucible of the war. VII ARRANGEMENT OF MATERIAL Items in this publication pertain to military campaigns and battles fought in the Western (including the Trans-Mississippi) Theater. The individual items have been arranged by theater and by state. The Western Theater and Trans-Mississippi sections consist of general reference materials, general histories of the war in the theater, and histories and narratives that relate to several battles. Within each state the items are arranged in the following manner: General Reference items are listed first in alphabetical order by author's name, followed by campaign and/ or battle. If a campaign and/or battle has more than one history, then they are in alphabetical order by the author's last name. Where applicable, an abbreviated form of the title is used in lieu of "no author"; this follows the arrangement set forth in Dornbusch's Military Bibliography of the Civil War. Common to all specific items is the following information. GA: 60. Reid, Samuel Chester. Great Battle of Chicamauga, A Concise History of Events from the Evacuation of Chattanooga to the Defeat of the Enemy. Full Details of the Battle, Incidents, Etc. Mobile, Alabama, F. Titcomb, 1863. 16pp. D. 2632. NDD. Chickamauga, GA. Item GA:60 Explanation Microfiche identification number; first number of fiche if multiple fiche for item Reid, Samuel Chester. Author of item Great Battle of Chicamauga, A Concise History of Events from the Evacuation of Chattanooga to the Defeat of the Enemy. Full Details of the Battle, Incidents, Etc. Title of item Mobile, Alabama, F. Titcomb, 1863. Place of publication, publisher, and year of publication (when any of these items is missing, the following abbreviations will appear: n.pl. = no place of publication; n.pub. no publisher; n.d. = no date of publication) 16pp. Number of pages in the item IX D 2632 The item's Dornbusch reference number. (Some items not listed in Dornbusch were uncovered in UPA's research, and the Dornbusch number indicated for these items is None.) Lowercase letters in parenthesis following the Dornbusch numbers have been added by UPA. NDD The source of the item (repository, library, archive, etc.). A list of the abbreviations can be found on page xi. Chickamauga, GA A list of major engagements that are highlighted in the individual items - Also listed, when applicable, are the pages containing a listing of the military units engaged. These notations can be found following the page count for the item. This finding aid also provides comprehensive indexes of all authors and all major engagements. Information pertinent to these indexes can be found at the beginning of the specific index. LIST OF CONTRIBUTING INSTITUTIONS The following is a list of the abbreviations used for the institutions that contributed items to this microform publication. When applicable, the OCLC (Online Computer Library Center) symbol was used to identify each of these institutions in the Fiche Index. OCLC Symbol Name of Institution DLC Library of Congress, Washington, DC GUA Hargrett Library, University of Georgia, Athens, GA HUL Harvard University Library, Cambridge, MA MHR U.S. Army Military History Institute, Carlisle Barracks, PA NDD Duke University Library, Durham, NC NYP New York Public Library, New York, NY OHT Ohio Historical Society, Columbus, OH SUC South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC TNS Tennessee State Library, Nashville, TN VIC State Library of Virginia, Richmond, VA [no symbol] Civil War Library and Museum, Philadelphia, PA XI SOURCE NOTE This micropublication is based on the official and literary battle and campaign histories and personal narratives listed in Charles E. Dornbusch's Military Bibliography of the Civil War, Volume III. A large number of items, however, are drawn from other sources, with many published overseas. The books and pamphlets included in this microfiche publication have been collected and collated from a large number of source institutions. The source for each item has been listed in the Fiche Index under each item by its Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) library code. A list of both the OCLC symbols and the institutional names is available on page xi. EDITORIAL NOTE The books and pamphlets collected in this publication have been filmed in their entirety and were printed prior to 1931. Every effort has been made to include the original edition of each item. Revised editions have been filmed in lieu of original editions when necessary. In a very few cases original editions and a revised edition have been included. This has occurred when a large portion of the original has been revised significantly. Periodical literature, newspapers, broadsides, imprints, and unpublished manuscripts have not been included in this micropublication. XIII FICHE INDEX Western Theater General References WT:1.Buell, Don Carlos. Statement of General Buell in Review of Evidence before the Military Commission, Appointed by the War Department in November 1862. Campaign in Kentucky, Tennessee, Northern Mississippi, and Northern Alabama in 1861 and 1862. n.pl., n.pub., [1862]. 72pp. D. 2498. MHR. Mill Springs, KY; Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS; Morgan's First Kentucky Raid; Cumberland Gap, TN; Munfordsville, KY; Perryville, KY. WT: 2. Fenton, E. B. From the Rapidan to Atlanta. Leaves from the Diary of Companion E. B. Fenton, Late Twentieth Connecticut Volunteer Infantry. Read Before the Commandery of the State of Michigan Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States at Detroit, Mich., April 6th, 1893. Detroit, Michigan, Winn & Hammond, 1893. 22pp. D. None. NYP. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; Cassville, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA. WT: 3. Force, Manning Ferguson. From Fort Henry to Corinth. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1881. 204pp. D. 2816A. Civil War Library and Museum. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; New Madrid, MO; Island No. 10, MO; Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS. WT: 6. Fry, James Barnet. Operations of the Army Under Buell, from June 10th to October 30th, 1862, and the "Buell Commission." New York, New York, D. Van Nostrand, 1884. 201 pp./map. D. 2501. MHR. Richmond, KY; Munfordsville, KY; Cumberland Gap, TN; Perryville, KY. WT: 9. Hubbard, Lucius F. Minnesota in the Red River Expedition, 1864, and the Campaign of Mobile, 1865. Papers Read Before the Minnesota Historical Society, November 11th, 1907 and February 10th, 1908. St. Paul, Minnesota, n.pub., 1908. 48pp. Units engaged page 48. D. None. MHR. Fort DeRussy, LA; Campti, LA; Sabine Cross Roads, LA; Pleasant Hill, LA; Poison Springs, AR; Cane River Crossing, LA; Mark's Mills, AR; Moore's Plantation, LA; Bayou LaMourie, LA; Mansura, LA; Yellow Bayou, LA; Tupelo, MS; Mobile, AL; Spanish Fort, AL; Fort Blakely, AL. WT: 10. Sherman, Ernest A. Dedicating in Dixie: A Series of Articles Descriptive of the Tour of the Governor Albert B. Cummins and Staff, the Members of the Vicksburg, Andersonville, Chattanooga, and Shiloh Monuments Commissions and Invited Guests, Through the South for the Purpose of Dedicating Iowa Memorials on Southern Battle Fields and Cemeteries, November 12th to November 25th, 1906. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Press of the Record Printing Company, 1907. 132pp. D. 2977. MHR. Shiloh, TN; Grand Gulf, MS; Jackson, MS; Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA. WT: 12. Surbey, Richard W. Two Great Raids: Colonel Grierson's Successful Swoop Through Mississippi. Morgan's Disastrous Raid Through Indiana and Ohio. Vivid Narratives of Both These Grand Operations, with Extracts from Official Records. John Morgan's Escape, Last Raid, and Death. Washington, D.C., National Tribune, 1897. 320pp. D. None. MHR. Grierson's Raid; Morgan's Raid (July 1863). Fiche Index Grierson's Raid WT: 16. Forbes, Stephen A. Grierson's Cavalry Raid. Address Before the Illinois State Historical Society, at Its Eighth Annual Meeting, Springfield, III., January 24, 1907. Reprinted from the Transactions of the Society. Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Historical Society, 1907. 34pp. D. None. MHR. Grierson's Raid in Mississippi and Louisiana. Mississippi Valley WT: 17. Fiske, John. The Mississippi Valley in the Civil War. Boston, Massachusetts, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1900. 368pp. D. 2540. MHR. Operations in Missouri 1861; Pea Ridge, AR; Operations in Tennessee 1862; Operations in Missouri 1862; Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS; New Orleans, LA; Operations in Kentucky 1862; Stones River, TN; Vicksburg, MS, Campaign; Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN, Campaign; Atlanta, GA, Campaign; Franklin, TN; Nashville, TN. WT: 22. Greene, Francis Vinton. Campaigns of the Civil War. The Mississippi. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1882. 276pp. Units engaged pages 248-257. D. 2541. MHR. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; New Madrid, MO; Island No. 10, MO; Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS (April 29-May 30, 1862); New Orleans, LA; luka, MS; Corinth, MS (October 3-4, 1862); Vicksburg, MS, Campaign; Port Hudson, LA. Morgan's Raid (July 1863) WT: 26. Allen, Theodore F. Six Hundred Miles of Fried Chicken: A Story of Morgan's Raids, 1863. Cincinnati, Ohio, n.pub., 1899 14pp D. None. MHR. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 27. Hockersmith, Lorenzo. Morgan's Escape: A Thrilling Story of War Times. A True History of the Raid of General Morgan and His Men Through Kentucky, Indiana, Ohio; Their Incarceration in the Columbus Penitentiary, Escape Therefrom and Tragic Death of the Intrepid Leader. Madisonville, Kentucky, Glenn's Graphic Print, 1903. 54pp. D. None. MHR. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 28. Indiana. Morgan Raid Commission. Report of the Morgan Raid Commissioners to the Governor, December 31,1867. n.pl., n.pub., 1867 7pp D. None. MHR. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 29. King, Charles P. The Important Part the Squirrel Hunters Played in the War of the Rebellion in Ohio, Delivered at the First Reunion of the Squirrel Hunters of Ohio at Buckeye Lake, Newark, Ohio, on Wednesday, September 12th, 1906, by Charles P. King, A.B., A.M., M.D. Newark, Ohio, n.pl., n.pub., [1906]. 6pp. D. 3120. OHT. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 30. Ohio. Commissioners to Examine Claims Growing Out of the Morgan Raid. Report of the Commissioners of Morgan Raid Claims, to the Governor of the State of Ohio, December 15th, 1864. Columbus, Ohio, Richard Nevins, 1865. 454pp. D. None. MHR. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 35. Senour, F. Morgan and His Captors. Cincinnati, Ohio, C. F. Vent & Company, 1865. 389pp. D. 3125. Civil War Library and Museum. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 40. Simmons, Flora E. A Complete Account of the John Morgan Raid Through Kentucky, Indiana, and Ohio in July 1863. [Louisville, Kentucky], Flora E. Simmons, 1863. 95pp. D. 3126. OHT. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). WT: 41. Simms, Jeremiah H. Morgan's Raid and Capture: The Story From Its Inception to the Last Night and Last Camp at Bergholz, formerly "Old Nebo." [East Liverpool, Ohio, n.pub., 1913.] 40pp. D. 3128. NYP. Morgan's Raid (July 1863). Fiche Index Sherman's Campaign WT: 45. Barnard, George N. Photographic Views of Sherman's Campaigns, from Negatives Taken in the Field. New York, New York, Wynkoop & Hallenbeck, 1866. 30pp. D. 2543. MHR. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Ringgold, GA; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea. WT: 46. Bowman, Samuel M. Sherman and His Campaigns; A Military Biography. New York, New York, Charles B. Richardson, 1865. 512pp. D. None. MHR. Bull Run, VA (First); Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Vicksburg, MS, Campaign; Chattanooga, TN, Campaign; Atlanta, GA, Campaign; Sherman's March to the Sea; Fort Fisher, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 52. Boynton, Henry Van Ness. Sherman's Historical Raid: The Memoirs in Light of the Record. A Review Based Upon Compilations from the Files of the War Office. Cincinnati, Ohio, Wilstach, Baldwin, & Company, 1875. 276pp. D. 2547. MHR. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; Shiloh, TN; luka, MS; Corinth, MS (October 3-4, 1862); Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Vicksburg, MS, Campaign; Chattanooga, TN, Campaign; Meridian, MS, Campaign; Atlanta, GA, Campaign; Sherman's March to the Sea; Nashville, TN; Bentonville, NC. WT: 55. Conyngham, David Power. Sherman's March Through the South, with Sketches and Incidents of the Campaign. New York, New York, Sheldon & Company, 1865. 431pp. Units engaged page 383. D. 2549. MHR. Chattanooga, TN; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Fort McAllister, GA; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 60. Cox, Jacob Dolson. The March to the Sea; Franklin and Nashville. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1882. 265?pp. Units engaged pages 223-229 and 244-250. D. None. NYP. Sherman's March to the Sea; Spring Hill, TN; Franklin, TN; Nashville, TN; Fort Fisher, NC; Kinston, NC; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 63. Hedley, Fenwick Y. Marching Through Georgia: Pen Pictures of Everyday Life in General Sherman's Army, From the Beginning of the Atlanta Campaign Until the Close of the War. Chicago, Illinois, Donohue, Henneberry & Company, 1890. 490pp. D. None. MHR. Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Fort McAllister, GA; Fayetteville, NC; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 69. Hitchcock, Henry. Marching with Sherman; Passages from the Letters and Campaign Diaries of Henry Hitchcock, Major and Adjutant General of Volunteers, November 1864-May 1865. New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Press, 1927. 332pp. D. 2556. NYP. Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA; Fort McAllister, GA; Fayetteville, NC; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 73. Nichols, George Ward. The Story of the Great March, from the Diary of a Staff Officer, with a Map and Illustrations. New York, New York, Harper & Brothers, 1865. 394pp. D. 2561. Civil War Library and Museum. Atlanta, GA; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA; Fort McAllister, GA; Fayetteville, NC; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. Fiche Index WT: 78. Pepper, George W. Personal Recollections of Sherman's Campaigns in Georgia and the Carolinas. Zanesville, Ohio, Hugh Dunne, 1866. 522pp. D. None. MHR. Chattanooga, TN; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA; Fort McAllister, GA; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 84. Senour, F. Major General William T. Sherman and His Campaigns. Chicago, Illinois, Henry M. Sherwood, 1865. 477pp D. 2563. MHR. Bull Run, VA (First); Shiloh, TN; Corinth, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Vicksburg, MS, Campaign; Chattanooga, TN, Campaign; Meridian, MS, Campaign; Atlanta, GA, Campaign; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA; Fort McAllister, GA; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville NC. WT: 89. Sherman, William T. General Sherman's Official Account of His Great March Through Georgia and the Carolinas, From His Departure from Chattanooga to the Surrender of General Joseph E. Johnston and the Confederate Forces Under His Command. To Which is Added, General Sherman's Evidence Before the Congressional Committee on the Conduct of the War; the Animadversions of Secretary Stanton and General Halleck; With a Defense of His Proceedings, Etc. New York, New York, Bunce & Huntington, 1865. 214pp. D. 2564. HUL. Chattanooga, TN, Campaign; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA; Averysboro, NC; Bentonville, NC. WT: 92. Snowden, Yates. Marching with Sherman, A Review by Yates Snowden of the Letters and Campaign Diaries of Henry Hitchcock, Major and Assistant Adjutant General of Volunteers as Edited by M. A. DeWolfe Howe and Published by The Yale Press. Columbia, South Carolina, n.pub., 1929. 58pp. D. 2568. VIC. Sherman's March to the Sea; Columbia, SC. Alabama Mobile AL: I.Andrews, C. C. History of the Campaign of Mobile, Including the Cooperative Operations of Gen. Wilson's Cavalry in Alabama. New York, New York, D. Van Nostrand, 1867. 276pp. D. 2582. MHR. Mobile, AL; Spanish Fort, AL; Fort Blakely, AL; Ebenezer Church, AL; Selma, AL. AL: 5. Hutchinson, William F. The Bay Fight: A Sketch of the Battle of Mobile Bay, August 5, 1864. Providence, Rhode Island, Sidney S. Rider, 1879. 28pp. D. None. MHR. Mobile, AL. AL: 6. Parker, Foxhall A. The Battle of Mobile Bay, and the Capture of Forts Powell, Gaines, and Morgan by the Combined Sea and Land Forces of the United States, Under the Command of Rear-Admiral David Glasgow Farragut and MajorGeneral Gordon Granger, August 1864. Boston, Massachusetts, A. Williams & Company, 1878. 136pp. Units engaged pages 77-91. D. None. MHR. Mobile, AL. AL: 8. Parker, Prescott A. Story of the Tensaw, Blakely, Spanish Fort, Jackson Oaks, Fort Mims. Montrose, Alabama, P.A. Parker, [1922]. 29pp. Units engaged pages 20-28. D. 2590. DLC. Spanish Fort, AL; Fort Blakely, AL. AL: 9. United States. Army. [War Records Office.] Operations Against Mobile, Ala., Organization of the Union Forces (Commanded by Major-General Edward R. S. Canby), March-April 1865. [Washington, D.C., War Records Office, n.d.] 7pp. D. 2592. MHR. Mobile, AL. Fiche Index AL: 10. Webster, Harrie. Personal Experiences on a Monitor at the Battle of Mobile Bay. A Paper Prepared and Read Before California Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, August 29, 1864. n.pl., n.pub., [1894]. 18pp. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Mobile, AL. Selma AL: 11. Hosea, Lewis M. The Campaign of Selma Read Before the Ohio Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Octobers, 1883. Cincinnati, Ohio, PeterG. Thomson, 1883. 34pp. D. None. MHR. Selma, AL. Arkansas Pea Ridge AR: 1. Baxter, William. Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove; or Scenes and Incidents of the War in Arkansas. Cincinnati, Ohio, Poe & Hitchcock, 1864. 262pp. D. 3156. MHR. Wilson's Creek, MO; Pea Ridge, AR; Prairie Grove, AR. Prairie Grove AR: 4. Payne, Eugene B. Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, Commandery of the District of Columbia, War Papers, Prairie Grove. Read at the Meeting of March 2,1904. n.pl., n.pub., [1904]. 22pp. D. None. DLC. Prairie Grove, AR. Georgia General References GA: 1. Georgia. [Smith, G. W.] Reports of the Operations of the Militia, from October 13,1864, to February 11,1865, Maj.-Generals G. W. Smith and Wayne Together with Memoranda by Gen. Smith for the Improvement of the State Military Organization. Macon, Georgia, Doughton, Nesbit, Barnes & Moore, [1865]. 29pp. D. 2597. NDD. Sherman's March to the Sea; Lovejoy, GA; Griswoldsville, GA. GA: 2. Jones, Chartes Colcock, Jr. Military Lessons Inculcated on the Coast of Georgia During the Confederate War. An Address Delivered Before the Confederate Survivors' Association, in Augusta, Georgia, At Its Fifth Annual Meeting, on Memorial Day, April 26,1883. Augusta, Georgia, Chronicle Printing Establishment, 1883. 15pp. D. 2598. VIC. Port Royal, SC; Fort Pulaski, GA; Fort McAllister, GA. GA: 3. Jones, Charles Colcock, Jr. Military Operations in Georgia During the War Between the States. Address Delivered Before the Confederate Survivors' Association in Augusta, Georgia, Upon the Occasion of Its Fifteenth Annual Reunion on Memorial Day, April 26th, 1893, by Col. Charles C. Jones, Jr., LL.D., President of the Association, and Chickamauga by Col. Joseph B. Gumming, a Member of the Association. Augusta, Georgia, Chronicle Job Printing Company, 1893. 32pp. D. 2599. DLC. Fort Pulaski, GA; Fort McAllister, GA; Chickamauga, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Sherman's March to the Sea; Griswoldsville, GA; Buckhead Creek, GA; Waynesboro, GA. Allatoona GA: 4. Brown, Joseph M. The Battle of Allatoona, October 5, 1864. One of the Gamest and Bloodiest Fights of the War. Some Facts Never Before Published. How the Confederate Ammunition Gave Out, and a Courier's Message Caused Them to Retreat from a Field Almost Won. Atlanta, Georgia, Record Publishing Company, 1890. 24pp. D. 2722. DLC. Allatoona, GA. Fiche Index GA: 5. Hill, George W. From Memphis to Allatoona, and the Battle of Allatoona, October 5, 1864. Providence, Rhode Island, Rhode Island Soldiers and Sailors Historical Society, 1891. 39pp. D. None. NYP. Allatoona, GA. GA: 6. Ludlow, William. The Battle of Allatoona, October 5, 1864. A Paper Read Before the Michigan Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States at Detroit, April 2, 1891. Detroit, Michigan, Winn & Hammond, 1891.42pp. D. 2724. NYP. Allatoona, GA. Andrews' Railroad Raid GA: 7. Ohio Boys in Dixie, The Adventures of... Ohio Boys in Dixie, The Adventures of Twenty-Two Scouts, Sent by Gen. O. M. Mitchell, to Destroy a Railroad, With a Narrative of Their Barbarous Treatment by the Rebels, and Judge Holt's Report. New York, New York, Miller & Mathews, 1863. 47pp. Units engaged page 2. D. 2507. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 8. Reunion of Survivors of the Andrews' Raiders... Reunion of Survivors of the Andrews' Raiders; Held at Chattanooga, Tenn. and Chickamauga Park, September 18-20, 1906. Nashville, Tennessee, Passenger Department, Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, 1906. 15pp. D. None. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 9. Gregg, Frank Moody. Andrews Raiders; or, the Last Scenes and the Final Chapter of the Daring Incursion Into the Heart of the Confederacy. Chattanooga, Tennessee, Republican Job Print, [1891]. 82pp. D. 2510. NDD. Andrews' Railroad Raid. G A: 10. McBryde, Randell W. The Historic "General," A Thrilling Episode of the Civil War. Chattanooga, Tennessee, MacGowan & Cooke Company, 1904. 55pp. D. 2512. NYP. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 11. Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis Railroad. The Story of the General, 1862. Nashville, Tennessee, Brandon, 1906. 18pp. D. None. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. G A: 12. Pittenger, William. Capturing a Locomotive: A History of Secret Service in the Late War. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, J. B. Lippincott & Company, 1881. 354pp. Units engaged page 4. D. 2514. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 16. Pittenger, William. Daring and Suffering: A History of the Great Railroad Adventure. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, J. W. Daughaday, 1863. 288pp. Units engaged page 4. D. 2516. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 20. Pittenger, William. Daring and Suffering: A History of the Andrews' Railroad Raid into Georgia in 1862, A Full and Accurate Account of the Secret Journey to the Heart of the Confederacy, the Capture of a Railway Train in a Confederate Camp, the Terrible Chase that Followed, and the Subsequent Fortunes of the Leader and His Party. New York, New York, War Publishing Company, 1887. 416pp. D. 2517. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 25. Pittenger, William. The Great Locomotive Chase, A History of the Andrews' Railroad Raid Into Georgia in 1862. New York, New York, John B. Alden, 1889. 416pp./55pp. Supplement. D. 2519. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. GA: 30. Wilson, John Alfred. Adventures of Alf. Wilson, A Thrilling Episode of the Dark Days of the Rebellion, by John A. Wilson, a Member of the Mitchell [sic] Railroad Raiders. Toledo, Ohio, Blade Printing & Paper Company, 1880. 237pp. D. 2524. MHR. Andrews' Railroad Raid. Fiche Index Atlanta GA: 33. Maps, Georgia, Northwestern, 1864... Map Showing the Operations of the National Forces Under the Command of Maj. Gen. W. T. Sherman During the Campaign Resulting in the Capture of Atlanta, Georgia, September 1864. Washington, D.C., Coast Survey Office, [1864]. 1p. D. None. HUL. Atlanta Campaign. GA: 34. Brown, Joseph M. The Great Retreat; Could Johnston Have Defended Atlanta Sucessfully? The Policy of the Great Southern General Defended and the Field Looked Over in Light of Events. A Review of His Plan of Campaign. Atlanta, Georgia, Railroad Record Print, 188?. 16pp. D. 2696. MHR. Atlanta Campaign; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA. GA: 35. Cox, Jacob Dolson. Campaigns of the Civil War. Atlanta. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1882. 274pp. Units engaged pages 245-252. D. 2697. NYP. Atlanta Campaign; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA. GA: 38. Dodge, Grenville M. The Battle of Atlanta and Other Campaigns, Addresses, Etc. Council Bluffs, Iowa, Monarch Printing Company, 1911. 183pp. D. 2700. MHR. Wilson's Creek, MO; Pea Ridge, AR; Atlanta, GA. GA: 40. Leggett, M. D. The Battle of Atlanta: A Paper Read by General M. D. Leggett Before the Society of the Army of the Tennessee, October 18th, 1883, at Cleveland. Cleveland, Ohio, John A. Davies, 1883. 28pp. D. 2711. DLC. Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA. GA: 41. Major, Duncan K. Supply of Sherman's Army During the Atlanta Campaign. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Army Service Schools Press, 1911.108pp. D. None. MHR. Atlanta Campaign; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA. GA: 43. Rodgers, Robert L. Report of Robert L. Rodgers, Historian to the Atlanta Camp No. 159, U.C.V., on the Capture of the DeGress Battery and Battery A, 1st III. Light Artillery, in the Battle of Atlanta, July 22d11864 with Papers Bearing Thereon. [Atlanta, Georgia, n.pub., 1896.] 47pp. D. 2714. GUA. Atlanta, GA. GA: 44. Steele, Matthew F. The Campaign of Atlanta. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Infantry & Cavalry School, 1907. 26pp. D. None. MHR. Atlanta Campaign; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahoochie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA; Allatoona, GA; Franklin, TN; Nashville, TN. GA: 45. United Confederate Veterans. Atlanta Camp. Battles of Atlanta. Short Sketch of the Battles Around, Siege, Evacuation and Destruction of Atlanta, Ga., in 1864, with Map, Historic Places, Directory to Battle Lines, Prominent Characters Who Participated, Etc. Prepared Under the Direction of the Committee of the Atlanta Camp, United Confederate Veterans, for Information of Visitors, and Sold for the Benefit of the Camp. Atlanta, Georgia, Bergstrom Printing Company, 1895. 31pp. Units engaged pages 29-31. D. 2718. VIC. Atlanta Campaign; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA; Jonesboro, GA. GA: 46. United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] The Atlanta Campaign. Organization of the Union (Field) Forces (Commanded by Major-General William T. Sherman) May 5-31, 1864. [Washington, D.C., War Records Office, 1888.] 16pp. Units engaged pages 316. D. 2719. Civil War Library and Museum. Atlanta Campaign. Fiche Index GA: 47. United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] The Atlanta Campaign. Organization of the Union (Field) Forces (Commanded by Major-General William T. Sherman) May 5-31, 1864. [Washington, D.C., War Records Office, 1888.] 28pp. Units engaged pages 328. D. 2720. Civil War Library and Museum. Atlanta Campaign. Chickamauga GA: 48. Anderson, Archer. The Campaign and Battle of Chickamauga, An Address Delivered Before the Virginia Division of the Army of Northern Virginia Association, at Their Annual Meeting, in the Capitol at Richmond, Va., October 25, 1881. Richmond, Virginia, William Ellis Jones, 1881. 38pp. D. 2607. VIC. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 49. Bragg, Braxton [Confederate States of America. Army. Department of Tennessee]. Official Report of the Battle of Chickamauga. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 234pp. D. None. VIC. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 52. Grade, Archibald. The Truth about Chickamauga. Boston, Massachusetts, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1911. 462pp. Units engaged pages 349-379. D. 2620. MHR. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 59. Norwood, Charles W. The Chickamauga and Chattanooga Battlefields. Chattanooga, Tennessee, Gervis M. Connelly, [1898]. 31pp. Units engaged pages 17-18 and 30-31. D. 2630. NYP. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 60. Reid, Samuel Chester. Great Battle of Chickamauga, A Concise History of Events from the Evacuation of Chattanooga to the Defeat of the Enemy. Full Details of the Battle, Incidents, Etc. Mobile, Alabama, F. Titcomb, 1863. 16pp. D. 2632. NDD. Chickamauga, GA. G A: 61. Reid, Samuel Chester. The Great Battle of Chicamauga [sic]. (Rebel Report) by S. C. Reid ("Ora"), Correspondent of the Mobile Tribune. Chattanooga, Tennessee, n.pub., 1864. 14pp. D. 2633. NDD. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 62. Turchin, John Basil. Noted Battles for the Union During the Civil War in the United States of America, 1861-1865: Chickamauga. Chicago, Illinois, Fergus Printing Company, 1888. 295pp. Units engaged pages 215-232. D. 2641. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 67. United States. Adjutant General's Office. Organization of the Army of the Cumberland, Commanded by Major General W. S. Rosecrans, at the Battle of Chickamauga, Ga., September 19-20, 1863, and Return of Casualties. Compiled Under the Direction of Brigadier General Richard C. Drum, Adjutant General U.S. Army. Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1886. 25pp. Units engaged pages 3-12. D. 2644. DLC. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 68. United States. Adjutant General's Office. Battle of Chickamauga, Ga., September 19-20,1863.1. Organization of the Army of the Cumberland (Commanded by Major General W. S. Rosecrans) and Return of Casualties. II. Organization of the Army of the Tennessee (Commanded by General Braxton Bragg). Compiled Under the Direction of Brigadier General Richard C. Drum, Adjutant General U.S. Army. Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1889. 33pp. Units engaged pages 3-10 and 25-33. D. 2645. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA. Chickamauga•Memorials GA: 69. Boynton, Henry Van Ness. Dedication of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, September 18-20,1895. Report of the Joint Committee To Represent the Congress at the Dedication of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Complied by H. V. Boynton for the Committee. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1896. 374pp. D. 2654. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. Fiche Index GA: 75. Boynton, Henry Van Ness. The National Miltary Park, Chickamauga-Chattanooga. An Historical Guide, with Maps and Illustrations. Cincinnati, Ohio, Robert Clarke Company, 1895. 307pp. D. 2655. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 80. Chickamauga Memorial Association. Proceedings at Chattanooga, Tenn., and Crawfish Springs, Ga., September 19 and 20, 1889. Chattanooga, Tennessee, Chattanooga Army of the Cumberland Entertainment Committee, [1889]. 43pp. D. 2657. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA. G A: 81. Disbrow, Albert. Glimpses of Chickamauga, A Complete Guide to All Points of Interest on this Historic Battlefield. A Brief, Yet Comprehensive Narrative of the Chickamauga Campaign and the Battles Around Chattanooga, With Maps and Illustrations From Original Drawings and Photographs. Chicago, Illinois, Donohue & Henneberry, 1895. 136pp. Units engaged pages 36-56. D. 2659. NDD. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Brown's Ferry, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 84. McElroy, Joseph C. The Battle of Chickamauga. Historical Map and Guide Book, n.pl., n.pub., [1895]. 18pp./map. D. 2661. NDD. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 85. Norwood, C. W. The Vade-Mecum: Guide to the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. A Handy Ready Reference: Not for a Day, But for All Time. Chattanooga, Tennessee, C. W. Norwood, 1895. 32pp. Units engaged pages 4-5. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 86. Belknap, Charles E. History of the Michigan Organizations at Chickamauga, Chattanooga, and Missionary Ridge, 1863. Lansing, Michigan, Robert Smith Printing Company, 1899. 375pp. Units engaged pages 288-363. D. 2671. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 92. McElroy, Joseph C. Chickamauga, Record of the Ohio Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Park Commission. Cincinnati, Ohio, Earhart & Richardson, 1896.199pp./map. Units engaged pages 1-5. D. 2674. VIC. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 96. Skinner, George Washington. Pennsylvania at Chickamauga and Chattanooga. Ceremonies at the Dedication of the Monuments Erected by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania to Mark the Positions of the Pennsylvania Commands Engaged in the Battles. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Wm. Stanley Ray, 1901. 500pp. D. 2677. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Brown's Ferry, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. GA: 104. Henderson, Daniel Sullivan. Address of Daniel S. Henderson at the Unveiling of the Palmetto Monument at the National Park, Chickamauga, May 27th, 1901. Aiken, South Carolina, Journal and Review Press, 1901. 12pp. D. 2678. SUC. Chickamauga, GA. GA: 105. South Carolina. Monument Commission. Ceremonies at the Unveiling of the South Carolina Monument on the Chickamauga Battlefield, May 27th, 1901. Together With a Record of the Commission Who Suggested and Were Instrumental in Securing and Erecting the Monument, Etc. n.pl., n.pub., [1901]. 50pp. D.. 2679. SUC. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Brown's Ferry, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. Fiche Index Columbus G A: 106. Swift, Charles Jewett. The Last Battle of the Civil War, Paper Read by Charles Jewett Swift, at the Organizing or First Meeting of the Columbus Historical Society, Wednesday Night, February 10th, 1915. Columbus, Georgia, Gilbert Printing Company, 1915. 33pp. D. 2743. DLC. Columbus, GA. Fort Pulaski GA: 107. Gillmore, Quincy Adams. Official Report to the United States Engineer Department of the Siege and Reduction of Fort Pulaski, Georgia, February, March, and April, 1862. New York, New York, D. Van Nostrand, 1862. 96pp./12pp. of maps and illustrations. D. 2602. MHR. Fort Pulaski, GA. Kenesaw Mountain GA: 109. Brown, Joseph Emerson. St. Valentine, February XIV, MDCCCLXXXVIII. [New York, New York, Fleming, Brewster & Alley 18881 7pp. D. 2689. Civil War Library and Museum. Kenesaw Mountain, GA. Mountain Campaign GA: 110. Brown, Joseph. The Mountain Campaign in Georgia; or, War Scenes on the W. & A. [Buffalo, New York, Matthews Northrup & Company, 1886.] 52pp. D. 2684. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Rocky Face Ridge, GA; Resaca, GA; New Hope Church, GA; Kenesaw Mountain, GA; Chattahootchie River, GA; Peachtree Creek, GA; Atlanta, GA; Ezra Church, GA. Savannah GA: 111. Jones, Charles Colcock, Jr. The Siege of Savannah in December 1864, and the Confederate Operations in Georgia and the Third Military District of South Carolina, during General Sherman's March from Atlanta to the Sea. Albany, New York, Joel Munsell, 1874. 184pp. D. 2739. NYP. Sherman's March to the Sea; Griswoldville, GA; Honey Hill, SC; Savannah, GA; Fort McAllister GA. GA: 114. United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] The Savannah Campaign: Organization of the Union Forces (Commanded by Major-General William T. Sherman) November 15-December21, 1864. [Washington, D.C., War Records Office, 1888.] 10pp Units engaged pages 3-10. D. 2742. MHR. Sherman's March to the Sea; Savannah, GA. Sherman's March to the Sea GA: 115. Jones, Charles Colcock, Jr. General Sherman's March from Atlanta to the Coast, An Address Delivered Before the Confederate Survivors' Association, in Augusta, Georgia, at Its Sixth Annual Meeting, On Memorial Day, April 26, 1884. Augusta, Georgia, Chronicle Printing Company, 1884. 19pp. D. 2732. VIC. Sherman's March to the Sea; Waynesboro, GA; Buckhead Creek, GA; Griswoldville, GA- Honey Hill, SC; Savannah, GA. GA: 116. Meerheimb, F. V. Sherman's Feldzug in Georgen. Vortrag, Gehaften am 30 Oktober 1868 in der Militärischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin. Berlin, Germany, Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn, 1869. 53pp./map. D. None. NYP. Sherman's March to the Sea. Kansas Quantrell's Lawrence Raid KS: 1. Bailey, Lawrence Dudley. Quantrell's Raid on Lawrence. With Names of Victims of the Raid. Lyndon, Kansas, n.pub., 1899 52DD D. 3209. DLC. Quantrell's Raid on Lawrence, KS. 10 Fiche Index KS: 2. Boughton, Joseph S. The Lawrence Massacre by a Band of Missouri Ruffians under Quantrell, August 21,1863. [Lawrence, Kansas, J.S. Boughton, 1885.] 36pp. D. 3210. NYP. Quantrell's Raid on Lawrence, KS. Louisiana General References LA: 1. Flinn, Frank. Campaigning with Banks in Louisiana, '63 and '64, and with Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley in '64 and '65. Boston, Massachusetts, W. B. Clarke & Company, 1889. 239pp. D. 331, Vol. 1, Part III. MHR. Louisiana, Western ('Teche") Campaign; Fort Bisland, LA; Expedition to Alexandria, LA; Port Hudson, LA; Cane River Crossing, LA; Expedition to Atchafalaya, LA; Winchester, VA (3rd); Fisher's Hill, VA; Cedar Creek, VA. LA: 4. Louisiana. Governor. [Allen, Henry A.] Official Report Relative to the Conduct of Federal Troops in Western Louisiana, During the Invasions of 1863 and 1864. Compiled from Sworn Testimony, Under the Direction of Governor Henry W. Allen. Shreveport, Louisiana, News Printing Establishment, 1865. 89pp. D. 2771. NDD. Louisiana, Western ("Teche") Campaign; Fort Bisland, LA; Expedition to Atchafalaya, LA; Bayou Vermillion, LA; Sabine Cross Roads, LA; Pleasant Hill, LA. New Orleans LA: 5. Confederate States of America. War Department. Proceedings of the Court of Inquiry, Relative to the Fall of New Orleans. Published by Order of Congress. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 206pp. D. 2776. VIC. New Orleans, LA. LA: 8. Confederate States of America. War Department. Correspondence between the War Department and General Lovell, Relating to the Defences of New Orleans, Submitted in Response to a Resolution of the House of Representatives Passed Third February 1863. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1863.123pp. D. 2777. VIC. New Orleans, LA. LA: 10. Parton, James. General Butler in New Orleans. History of the Administration of the Department of the Gulf in the Year 1862; with an Account of the Capture of New Orleans, and a Sketch of the Previous Career of the General, Civil and Military. New York, New York, Mason Brothers, 1864. 649pp. D. 2779. MHR. Big Bethel, VA; New Orleans, LA. LA: 17. United States. Navy Department. Letter of the Secretary of the Navy: In Answer to a Resolution of the 22nd Ultimo, Transmitting the Official Reports and Documents with the Recent Engagements on the Mississippi River, Which Resulted in the Capture of Forts Jackson, St. Philip, and the City of New Orleans, the Destruction of the Rebel Flotilla, Etc. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1862. 107pp./maps. D. None. MHR. New Orleans, LA. LA: 19. United States. Navy Department. Reports of the Naval Engagements on the Mississippi River, Resulting in the Capture of Forts Jackson and St. Philip, and the City of New Orleans, and the Destruction of the Rebel Naval Flotilla. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1862. 107pp./maps. D. None. NYP. New Orleans, LA. Port Hudson LA: 21. Preston, F. W. Port Hudson: A History of the Investment, Siege, and Capture. Last Days of the Siege. Interesting Particulars of the Capture. The Number of Prisoners. The Entry of Our Troops. The Rebel Officers Detained and Their Men Paroled. Appearances of the Place. Destructive Effects of the Bombardment. The Rebel Regiments Captured. Rebel Opinion of the Attack on the 27th of May, as Given by a Correspondent, July 14, 1863, with the Partial Experiences of the Author During Three Years in the March, Camp, Field and Hospitals, 19th Army Corps, Department of the Gulf. [Brooklyn, New York, Preston, 1892.] 72pp. D. None. NYP. Port Hudson, LA; Sabine Cross Roads, LA; Pleasant Hill, LA. 11 Fiche Index Red River Campaign LA: 22. United States. Army. [War Records Office.] The Red River Campaign. Organization of the Union Forces (Commanded by Major-General Nathaniel P. Banks), March 31, 1864. [Washington, D.C., War Records Office, 1888.] 6pp. Units engaged pages 3-6. D. 2803. MHR. Red River Campaign. Mississippi Vicksburg MS: 1. Confederate States of America. President. Correspondence Between the President and General Joseph E. Johnston, Together With That of the Secretary of War and the Adjutant and Inspector General, During the Months of May, June, and July 1863. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 64pp. D. 2839. VIC. Vicksburg, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS. MS: 2. Force, Manning F. Personal Recollections of the Vicksburg Campaign. A Paper Read Before the Ohio Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States by Companion Manning F. Force, Late Brigadier General, Brevet Major General U.S. Volunteers, January 7,1885. Cincinnati, Ohio, Henry C. Sherick, 1885. 15pp. D. None. MHR. Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 3. Hobart, Edwin. A Story of Vicksburg and Jackson, "Lest We Forget." Dispatches of Charles A. Dana. General John A. McClemand, Commanding 13th Army Corps. General Jacob G. Lauman, Commanding 4th Division, Army Corps. Report of Colonel Isaac Pugh, 41st Illinois, Commanding First Brigade; and Report of Colonel George E. Bryant, 12th Wisconsin, Commanding 3rd Brigade, 4th Division, 16th Army Corps. "All About Jackson," by Samuel M. Howard, Company H, 28th Illinois, Gettysburg, South Dakota. Compiled from the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. War of the Rebellion. Denver, Colorado, [HicksFairall, 1909]. 28pp. D. None. MHR. Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Jackson, MS (July 9-16, 1863). MS: 4. Hubbard, Lucius F. Minnesota in the Campaigns of Vicksburg, November 1862^July 1863. An Address Delivered Before the Minnesota Historical Society, September 9th, 1907. Report of the Minnesota-Vicksburg Monument Commission. St. Paul, Minnesota, n.pub., [1908]. 64pp./map. D. 2847. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14,1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 5. Illinois Central Railroad Company. Vicksburg for the Tourist. The Vicksburg National Military Park, Commemorating the Siege and Defense of the Historic City, A Most Instructive and Impressive Object Page of One of the Nation's Most Interesting Historical Incidents. The National Cemetery, One of the Most Park-Like, Largest and Pleasantly Impressive of All the National Cemeteries. The City, Picturesquely Overlooking the Mississippi From the Commanding Site. Chicago, Illinois, n.pub., 1913. 32pp. D. None. MHR. Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS. MS: 6. Johnston, Joseph E. Report of General Joseph E. Johnston of His Operations in the Departments of Mississippi and East Louisiana, Together with Lieut. General Pemberton's Report of the Battles of Port Gibson, Baker's Creek, and the Siege of Vicksburg. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 213pp. D. 2850. VIC. Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. 12 Fiche Index MS: 9. Logan, John A. Speech of Major General John A. Logan on Return to Illinois, After Capture of Vicksburg. Reported by "Mack" of the Cincinnati Commercial. Cincinnati, Ohio, Caleb Clark, 1863. 32pp. D. None. MHR. Vicksburg, MS. MS: 10. Loring, William W. The Report of Major General Loring of the Battle of Baker's Creek, and Subsequent Movements of His Command. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 29pp. D. 2856. VIC. Port Gibson, MS; Champion's Hill, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 11. Loughborough, Mary Webster. My Cave Life in Vicksburg. With Letters of Trial and Travel. New York, New York, D. Appleton and Company, 1864. 196pp. D. None. NYP. Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 14. Reed, Samuel Rockwell. The Vicksburg Campaign and the Battles about Chattanooga Under the Command of General U. S. Grant, in 1862-63, An Historical Review. Cincinnati, Ohio, Robert Clarke & Company, 1882. 201pp. D. 2863. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14,1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. MS: 17. Rigby, William Titus. Historic Vicksburg, An Epitome of the Campaign, Siege, Defense of Vicksburg, March 29-July 4, 1863; A Statement, By States, of the Organizations Engaged Therein; and a Brief Account of the Inception of the Vicksburg National Military Park and of the Work That Has Been Done Toward Its Establishment, [n.pl., n.pub., n.d.] 16pp. Units engaged pages 4-5. D. 2865. Civil War Library and Museum. Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 18. Rigby, William Titus. Historic Vicksburg, An Epitome of the Campaign, Siege, Defense of Vicksburg, March 29-July 4, 1863; A Statement, By States, of the Organizations Engaged Therein; and a Brief Account of the Inception of the Vicksburg National Military Park and of the Work That Has Been Done Toward Its Establishment. Revised Edition, [n.pl., n.pub., 1905.] 24pp. Units engaged pages 5-6. D. 2866. Civil War Library and Museum. Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 19. Steele, Matthew F. The Campaign of Vicksburg. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Infantry & Cavalry School, 1907. 35pp. D. None. MHR. luka, MS; Corinth, MS (October a-4,1862); Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 20. United States. Vicksburg National Military Park Commission. Record of the Organizations Engaged in the Campaign, Siege, and Defense of Vicksburg. Compiled From the Official Records. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1901. 72pp./map. Units engaged pages 5-70. D. 2875. MHR. Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 21. Vilas, William F. A View of the Vicksburg Campaign; A Paper Read before the Madison Literary Club, October 14, 1907. [Madison, Wisconsin], Wisconsin History Commission, 1908.104pp. D. None. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Port Hudson, LA. 13 Fiche Index Vicksburg•Memorials MS: 23. Illinois. Vicksburg Military Park Commission. Illinois at Vicksburg. Published Under Authority of an Act of the Forty-Fifth General Assembly by the lllinoisVicksburg Military Park Commission. Chicago, Illinois, Blakely Printing Company, 1907. 709pp./14pp. Appendix. Units engaged pages 88-113. D. 2882. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Port Hudson, LA. MS: 31. Adams, Henry Clay. Indiana at Vicksburg. Published Pursuant to an Act of the Sixty-Sixth General Assembly, Approved March 5, 1909 by the Indiana-Vicksburg Military Park Commission. Indianapolis, Indiana, William B. Burford, 1911. 476pp. Units engaged pages 138-140. D. 2884. MHR. Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 36. Hanly, James Frank. Vicksburg. Cincinnati, Ohio, Jennings and Graham, 1912. 44pp. D. 2885. MHR. Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg MS; Port Hudson, LA. MS: 37. Abernethy, Alonzo. Dedication of Monuments Erected by the State of Iowa, Commemorating the Death, Suffering and Valor of Her Soldiers on the Battlefields of Vicksburg, Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Shiloh and in the Confederate Prison at Andersonville. Des Moines, Iowa, Emory H. English, 1908. 301pp. D. 2888. MHR. Shiloh, TN; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, MS: 41. Cummins, Albert B. In the Matter of the Controversy Between the Shiloh National Military Park Commission and the Iowa Shiloh Commission Relating to Inscription Upon the Regimental Monuments of the 15th and 16th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Before the Secretary of War. Proof and Argument Presented By Albert B. Cummins, Governor of Iowa, n.pl., n.pub., [1903]. 59pp. D. 2976. DLC. Shiloh, TN. MS: 42. Iowa. Vicksburg Commission. Commissioner's Report: Commission to Locate Position of Iowa Troops in the Siege of Vicksburg. Des Moines, Iowa, B. Murphy, 1901. 48pp. D. None. MHR. Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14, 1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 43. Kansas. Vicksburg National Park Memorial Commission. Report of the Kansas Vicksburg National Park Memorial Commission, December 1, 1920. Topeka, Kansas, Kansas State Printing Plant, 1920. 25pp. D. None. DLC. Vicksburg, MS. MS: 44. Louisiana. Vicksburg Park Memorial Commission. Report of the Louisiana-Vicksburg Park Memorial Commission to the Governor, Under the Terms of Act 95 of 1918. Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Ramires-Jones Printing Company, 1922. 32pp. Units engaged pages 2627. D. None. DLC. Vicksburg, MS. MS: 45. Ohio. Vicksburg Battlefield Commission. Ohio at Vicksburg, Report of the Ohio Vicksburg Battlefield Commission. [Columbus, Ohio, n.pub., 1906.] 374pp./map. Units engaged pages 30-33. D. 2893. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Arkansas Post, AR; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14,1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Port Hudson, LA; Big Black River, MS. MS: 50. Cuffel, Charles A. Dedication of the Pennsylvania Memorial at Vicksburg, Mississippi, March 24, 1906: An Account of the Pilgrimage to the Southland by Letters to the Doylestown Intelligencer, n.pl., n.pub., 1906. 14pp D 2894 MHR. Vicksburg, MS; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. 14 Fiche Index MS: 51. Dedication of the Virginia Tablet in the... Dedication of the Virginia Tablet in the Vicksburg, National Military Park, Friday Evening, November 22, 1907: Exercises in the First Baptist Church, Vicksburg, Mississippi. Vicksburg, Mississippi, Mississippi Printing Company, [1907]. 26pp. D. 2897. MHR. Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Champion's Hill, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 52. West Virginia. Vicksburg Military Park Commission. State of West Virginia Report of Vicksburg Military Park Commission. Charleston, West Virginia, Jarrett Printing Company, 1923. 59pp./map. Units engaged pages 36-56. D. 2898. VIC. Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Vicksburg, MS. MS: 54. [Rood, Hosea Whitford.] Wisconsin at Vicksburg: Report of the Wisconsin-Vicksburg Monument Commission, Including the Story of the Campaign and Siege of Vicksburg in 1863, with Especial Reference to the Activities Therein of Wisconsin Troops. Madison, Wisconsin, n.pub., 1914. 501pp. Units engaged pages 219-283. D. 2899. MHR. Holly Springs, MS; Chickasaw Bayou, MS; Expedition to Lake Providence, LA; Expedition to Yazoo Pass, MS; Expedition to Steele's Bayou, MS; Grand Gulf, MS; Port Gibson, MS; Raymond, MS; Jackson, MS (May 14,1863); Champion's Hill, MS; Big Black River, MS; Vicksburg, MS. Missouri General References MO: 1. Anderson, Edward. Camp Fire Stories: A Series of Sketches of the Union Army in the Southwest. Chicago, Illinois, Star Publishing Company, 1900. 274pp. D. None. MHR. MO: 5. Colfax, Schuyler. Fremont's Hundred Days in Missouri. Speech of Schuyler Colfax, of Indiana, in Reply to Mr. Blair, of Missouri, Delivered in the House of Representatives, March 7,1862. [Washington, D.C., Scammell & Company, 1862.] 16pp. D. 3219. VIC. Camp Jackson, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO; Lexington, MO. MO: 6. Drake, Charles D. Camp Jackson: Its History and Significance. Oration of Charles D. Drake, Delivered in the City of St. Louis, May 11, 1863, on the Anniversary of the Capture of Camp Jackson. To Which Is Subjoined His Reply to the Missouri Republican's Attack Upon Him, on Account of That Oration. St. Louis, Missouri, Missouri Democrat Office, 1863. 16pp. D. 3222. DLC. Camp Jackson, MO. MO: 7. McElroy, John. The Struggle for Missouri. Washington, D.C., National Tribune Company, 1909. 342pp. D. 3229. MHR. Camp Jackson, MO; Booneville, MO; Carthage, MO; Dug Springs, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO; Lexington, MO; Fredericktown, MO; Belmont, MO; Pea Ridge, AR. MO: 11. Peckham, James. Gen. Nathanial Lyon and Missouri in 1861, A Monograph of the Great Rebellion. New York, New York, American News Company, 1866. 447pp. Units engaged pages 119-129 and 132-134. D. 3234. MHR. Camp Jackson, MO; Booneville, MO; Carthage, MO; Dug Springs, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO. MO: 16. Snead, Thomas Lowndes. The Fight for Missouri, From the Election of Lincoln to the Death of Lyon. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1886. 322pp. Units engaged pages 309-315. D. 3235. MHR. Camp Jackson, MO; Booneville, MO; Carthage, MO; Dug Springs, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO. MO: 20. United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri. Correspondence Between General Pope, Commanding Military Division of the Missouri, and His Excellency, Gov. Fletcher Concerning the Condition of Affairs in Missouri and the Relation of the Military Forces Thereto. St. Louis, Missouri, R. P. Studley & Company, 1865.14pp. D. None. NDD. Price's Raid in Missouri; Guerrilla Operations in Missouri. 15 Fiche Index MO: 21. Webb, William Larkin. Battles and Biographies of Missourians; or, the Civil War Period of Our State. Kansas City, Missouri, Hudson-Kimberly Publishing Company, 1900. 407pp./pictures. D. 3237. MHR. Camp Jackson, MO; Booneville, MO; Carthage, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO; Lexington, MO; Pea Ridge, AR; Independence, MO; Lone Jack, MO; Newtonia, MO; Cane Hill, AR; Prairie Grove, AR; Helena, AR; Westport, MO; Guerrilla Operations in Missouri. Belmont MO: 26. Polk, Leónidas. General Polk's Report of the Battle of Belmont. Columbus, Kentucky, n.pub., 1861. 8pp. D. 3263. VIC. Belmont, MO. Lexington MO: 27. Lexington Historical Society. The Battle of Lexington, Fought In, and Around the City of Lexington, Missouri, on September 18th, 19th, and 20th, 1861, by Forces Under the Command of Colonel James A. Mulligan, U.S.A. and General Sterling Price, M.S.G. The Official Records of Both Parties to the Conflict; to Which Is Added Memoirs of Participants with Maps and Cuts. [Lexington, Missouri], Intelligencer Printing Company, [1903]. 60pp. D. 3258. NDD. Lexington, MO. Palmyra MO: 28. Sosey, Frank H. Robert Devoy; A Tale of the Palmyra Massacre. Palmyra, Missouri, Press of Sosey Bros., 1903.173pp. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Palmyra, MO. Pilot Knob MO: 31. Peterson, Cyrus A. Pilot Knob: The Thermopylae of the West. New York, New York, Neale Publishing Company, 1914. 324pp. D. 3287. Civil War Library and Museum. Pilot Knob, MO; Leasburg, MO. MO: 35. Pilot Knob Memorial Association. Meeting of the The Pilot Knob Memorial Association on the Fortieth Anniversary of the Battle of Pilot Knob, September 27, 1904. St. Louis, Missouri, A. R. Fleming Printing Company, 1904. 34pp. D. 3288(a). NYP. Pilot Knob, MO; Leasburg, MO. MO: 36. Pilot Knob Memorial Association. Second Annual Meeting of the The Pilot Knob Memorial Association on the Forty-First Anniversary of the Battle of Pilot Knob, September 26, 27, and 28th, 1905. St. Louis, Missouri, A. R. Fleming Printing Company, 1905. 40pp. Units engaged page 4. D. 3288(b). NYP. Pilot Knob, MO; Leasburg, MO. MO: 37. Pilot Knob Memorial Association. Third Annual Meeting of the The Pilot Knob Memorial Association on the Forty-Second Anniversary of the Battle of Pilot Knob, September 26, 27, and 28th, 1906. St. Louis, Missouri, A. R. Fleming Printing Company, 1906. 53pp. D. 3288(c). NYP. Pilot Knob, MO. Price's Raid MO: 38. Hinton, Richard J. Rebel Invasion of Missouri and Kansas, and the Campaign of the Border Against General Sterling Price, in October and November 1864. Chicago, Illinois, Church & Goodman, 1865. 351pp. D. None. NYP. Pilot Knob, MO; Leasburg, MO; Lexington, MO (October 19, 1864); Little Blue, MO; Independence, MO; Big Blue, MO; State Line, MO; Westport, MO; Marais des Cygnes, KS; Mine Creek, KS; Little Osage, KS; Chariot, MO; Newtonia, MO; Fayetteville, AR. 16 Fiche Index Westport MO: 42. Jenkins, Paul B. The Battle of Westport. Compiled from the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, from Biographies, Statements of Participants, Federal and Confederate Officers, Eye-Witnesses, Private Sources, Newspaper Accounts of the Time, Etc., Etc. Accompanied by Hitherto Unpublished Maps of the Battle-Fields Reproduced from Government Originals, Showing Movements of the Troops Engaged, Etc. Illustrated with Photographs of the Important Sites Mentioned, of Relics of the Battle, Etc., Especially Taken for This Work. To Which is Added an Appendix Containing the First Complete Statement of the Organization of the Three Armies Engaged, and an Index of Individuals and Troops Mentioned. Kansas City, Missouri, Franklin Hudson Publishing Company, 1906.193pp. Units engaged pages 161-172. D. 3291. Civil War Library and Museum. Pilot Knob, MO; Little Blue, MO; Independence, MO; Big Blue, MO; Westport, MO. Wilson's Creek MO: 45. Holcombe, R. I. An Account of the Battle of Wilson's Creek, or Oak Hills, Fought Between the Union Troops, Commanded by Gen. N. Lyon, and the Southern, or Confederate Troops Under Command of Gens. McCulloch and Price, on Saturday, August 10, 1861, in Greene County, Missouri, Written and Compiled from Authentic Sources. Published on the Twenty-Second Anniversary of the Battle, as a Full and Faithful Account, and as a Memorial of the Reunion of the Survivors of the Engagement of Both Sides, Held August 8, 9, and 10, 1883. Springfield, Missouri, Dow & Adams, 1883. 104pp. D. 3248. NYP. Wilson's Creek, MO. New Mexico Fort Fillmore NM: 1. McKee, James Cooper. Narrative of the Surrender of a Command of U.S. Forces at Fort Filmore, N.M., in July, A.D., 1861. Boston, Massachusetts, John A. Lowell & Company, 1886. 32pp. D. 3308. NYP. Fort Fillmore, NM. Tennessee Chattanooga TN: 1. Battles of Chattanooga, Fought November 23-25... Battles of Chattanooga, Fought November 23-25,1863, by the Armies of the Cumberland and Tennessee, Under Generals Grant, Thomas, Sherman, and Hooker. General Bragg Commanding the Confederate Forces. Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge and Localities Made Famous by the Battles of Chickamauga, Wauhatchie, Graysville, Ringgold, Etc. A Resume of the Situations Shown in the Panorama of Missionary Ridge, and Very Full Extracts of Official Reports and Papers from the Library of William Wehner's Panorama Studio, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Chicago, Illinois, W. J. Jefferson, 1886. 73pp./map. Units engaged pages 72-73. D. 3012. HUL. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Ringgold, GA. TN: 3. Panorama of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and... [Philadelphia Panorama Company]. Panorama of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain, Fought Between the Union and Confederate Forces, November 23, 24, and 25, 1863. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Panorama Company, n.d. 20pp. Units engaged pages 12-16. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 4. Boynton, Henry V. Chattanooga and Chickamauga. Reprint of Gen. H. V. Boynton's Letters to the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, August 1888. Washington, D.C., Gray & Clarkson, 1888. 59pp. D. 3018A. MHR. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN. 17 Fiche Index TN: 5. Butterfield, Daniel. Major-General Joseph Hooker and the Troops of the Army of the Potomac at Wauhatchie, Lookout Mountain, and Chattanooga, Together with General Hooker's Military Record from the Files of the War Department, Adjutant General's Office. Address by Major-General Daniel Butterfield at the Battlefield Dedication Ceremonies at Chattanooga, September 18, 1895, by Invitation of the National Commission. New York, New York, Exchange Printing Company, 1896. 48pp. D. 3020. MHR. Chattanooga, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Ringgold, TN: 6. Connor, George C. Historical Guide to Chattanooga and Lookout Mountain with Descriptions of the Battles, Battlefields, Climate, Industries, Minerals, Timber, Etc. Profusely Illustrated. Chattanooga, Tennessee, T. H. Payne & Company 1889. 72pp. D. None. MHR. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 7. Fitch, John [Webster, B. F.]. Chickamauga, The Price of Chattanooga. A Description of Strategic Plans, Marches, and Battles of the Campaign of Chattanooga with Illustrative Map. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, J. B. Lippincott & Company, 1864. 57pp./map. D. 3023. HUL. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN. TN: 8. Kniffin, Gilbert C. Assault and Capture of Lookout Mountain, 'The Battle Above the Clouds." Chattanooga, Tennessee, W. E. Hardison, [1898]. 32pp. D. 3032. VIC. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 9. Meigs, Montgomery C. The Three Days' Battle of Chattanooga, 23d, 24th, 25th, 1864, an Unofficial Dispatch from General Meigs, Quartermaster General of the United States to the Hon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War. Accompanied by a Plan of the Battle, Furnished by the U.S. Coast Survey Office. New York, New York, n.pub., 1864. 10pp./map. D. None. HUL. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 10. Severance, Margaret A. E. Descriptive and Historical Guide to Chattanooga, Lookout Mountain and Walden's Ridge. Chattanooga, Tennessee, Times Book and Job Office, 1892. 75pp. D. 3038A. DLC. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 11. Sheridan, Philip Henry. Report of Operations of the Second Division, Fourth Army Corps, Army of the Cumberland, Maj. Gen. P. H. Sheridan, U.S. Vol's, Commanding, From November 23d to November 26th, 1863, Including the Battle of Mission Ridge, n.pl., n.pub., [1864]. 9pp. Units engaged page 1. D. 3039. DLC. Chattanooga, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 12. Smith, William Farrar. Military Operations Around Chattanooga, in October and November 1863. [Wilmington, Delaware, James & Webb Printing Co., 1886.] 12pp. D. None. DLC. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 13. Taylor, Benjamin Franklin. Mission Ridge and Lookout Mountain, with Pictures of Life in Camp and Field. New York, New York, D. Appleton & Company, 1872. 272pp. D. None. NYP. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 16. Taylor, Benjamin F. Pictures of Life in Camp and Field. Chicago, Illinois, S. C. Griggs & Company, 1875. 270pp. D. None. MHR. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 19. United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] Organization of the United States Force (Commanded by Major-General U. S. Grant) in the ChattanoogaRossville Campaign, November 23-27, 1863, and Return of Casualties. [Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1887.] 28pp. Units engaged pages 3-13. D. 3043. DLC. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Ringgold, GA. 18 Fiche Index TN: 20. United States. Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Commission. The Campaign for Chattanooga. Historical Sketch Descriptive of the Model in Relief, of the Region about Chattanooga, and of the Battles Illustrated Thereon. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1902. 47pp. Units engaged page 24. D. None. DLC. Tullahoma, TN, Campaign; Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Wauhatchie Valley, TN; Orchard Knob, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. TN: 21. United States. Smith (William Parrar), Board of Officers Upon the Claim of. Report of a Board of Army Officers upon the Claim of Maj. Gen. William Parrar Smith, U.S.V., Major, U.S. Army (Retired), That He and Not Rosecrans, Originated the Plan for the Relief of Chattanooga in October 1863. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1901. 275pp. (three separate documents)/map. D. 3045. NYP. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN. TN: 25. Wood, Bradford R., Jr. Chattanooga; or Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge from Moccasin Point. [Saratoga Springs, New York, U.S. Veteran Signal Corps Association, 1907.] 24pp. D. None. NYP. Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN; Ringgold, GA. Chattanooga•Memorials TN: 26. Oates, William Calvin. Speech of Governor William C. Oates of Alabama, Delivered at Chattanooga, Tenn., September 20th, 1895, on the Battles of Chickamauga and Chattanooga. Dedication of the National Park. Montgomery, Alabama, Roemer Printing Company, 1895. 18pp. D. 3049. NDD. Chickamauga, GA; Chattanooga, TN; Lookout Mountain, TN; Missionary Ridge, TN. East Tennessee Campaign, 1863 TN: 27. Brearley, W. H. Recollections of the East Tennessee Campaign, Battle of Campbell Station, 16th Nov. 1863; Siege of Knoxville, 17th Nov.-5th Dec. 1863. Detroit, Michigan, Tribune Book and Job Office, 1871. 48pp. D. None. HUL Campbell's Station, TN; Knoxville, TN. TN: 28. Poe, Orlando M. Personal Recollections of the Occupation of East Tennessee and the Defense of Knoxville, A Paper Read before the Michigan Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, December 5th, 1888, by Companion Orlando M. Poe. Detroit, Michigan, Ostler Printing Company, 1889. 48pp. D. 3058. VIC. Blue Springs, TN; Campbell's Station, TN; Knoxville, TN. TN: 29. Williams, John Stuart. Report of Brig. Gen. John S. Williams of Operations in East Tennessee, from 27th September to 15th October, 1863. Richmond, Virginia, R. M. Smith, 1864. 9pp. D. 2986. VIC. Jonesboro, TN; Blue Springs, TN. Fort Pillow TN: 30. United States. Conduct of the War, Joint Committee on the. Reports in Relation to the Late Massacre at Fort Pillow and on the Condition of Returned Prisoners. Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1864. 128pp./34pp./8pp. of photographs and captions. D. 3061. Civil War Library and Museum. Fort Pillow, TN. Forts Henry and Donelson TN: 32. Confederate States of America. House of Representatives. Report of the Special Committee, on the Recent Military Disasters at Forts Henry and Donelson, and the Evacuation of Nashville. Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer Book and Job Press, 1862.178pp. D. 2919. VIC. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN. TN: 34. U.S. General Service Schools, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Donelson Campaign Sources, Supplementing Volume 7 of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies in the War of the Rebellion. Compiled for Use at the Army Service Schools, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. [Fort Leavenworth, Kansas,] Army Service Schools Press, 1912. 244pp./19pp. of photos and maps. D. 2926. MHR. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN. 19 Fiche Index TN: 38. U.S. General Service Schools, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Fort Henry and Fort Donelson Campaigns, February 1862, Source Book. Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, General Service Schools Press, 1923. 1,488pp. D. 2927. MHR. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN. Franklin TN: 54. Banks, R. W. The Battle of Franklin, November 30, 1864, the Bloodiest Engagement of the War Between the States. New York, New York, The Neale Publishing Company, 1908. 88pp. D. None. NYP. Franklin, TN. TN: 55. Cox, Jacob D. The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864, A Monograph. With Maps. New York, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1897. 351pp. D. 3075. VIC. Spring Hill, TN; Franklin, TN. TN: 59. Shellenberger, John K. The Battle of Franklin, Tennessee, November 30, 1864; A Statement of the Erroneous Claims Made by General Schofield, and an Exposition of the Blunder Which Opened the Battle. Cleveland, Ohio, Arthur H. Clarke Company, 1916. 42pp. D. None. NYP. Franklin, TN. Hood's Tennessee Campaign TN: 60. Hay, Thomas Robson. Hood's Tennessee Campaign. New York, New York, Walter Neale, 1929. 272pp. D. 3067. NYP. Spring Hill, TN; Franklin, TN; Nashville, TN. Nashville TN: 63. Beard, W. E. The Battle of Nashville: The Limit of the Last Aggressive Movement of the Armies of the Confederacy. Hood's Grand Maneuver Designed to Prevent Sherman's March to the Sea. Fought in the Southern Suburbs of Nashville, December 15-16, 1864. Nashville, Tennessee, Benson Printing Company, 1913. 16pp. D. None. NDD. Spring Hill, TN; Franklin, TN; Nashville, TN. TN: 64. DePeyster, J. W. Nashville, the Decisive Battle of the Rebellion [Address Delivered Before the Annual Meeting of the New York Historical Society on Tuesday Evening, January 4, 1874]. n.pl., n.pub., [1876]. 14pp. D. 3086. HUL. Nashville, TN. TN: 65. Kelley, Leverett M. Battle of Nashville. Prepared by Companion Captain Leverett M. Kelley, U.S. Volunteers and Read at the Stated Meeting of January 1,1908. [Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1908.] 13pp. D. None. DLC. Nashville, TN. Shiloh TN: 66. [The Battle] Field of Shiloh. The Battle Field of Shiloh. n.pl., n.pub., [1862?]. 8pp. D. 2933. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 67. Andreas, A. T. Manual of the Panorama of the Battle of Shiloh. Chicago, Illinois, A. T. Andreas, 1885. 15pp. D. 2934. Civil War Library and Museum. Shiloh, TN. TN: 68. Ewing, Thomas. Governor of Ohio, In Answer to His Charges Against Our Generals Who Fought the Battle of Shiloh, on the 6th of April, 1862. Columbus, Ohio, Richard Nevins, 1862. 24pp. D. 2941. HUL. Shiloh, TN. TN: 69. Ewing, Thomas. Letter of the the Hon. Thomas Ewing to His Excellency Benj. Stanton, Lieut. Governor of Ohio, In Answer to His Letter of Nov. 4, Relative to Charges Against Our Generals Who Fought the Battle of Shiloh, on the 6th of April 1862. Columbus, Ohio, R. Nevins, [1862]. 12pp. D. 2942. DLC. Shiloh, TN. 20 Fiche Index TN: 70. Hickenlooper, A. General Hickenlooper at the Battle of Shiloh. [Cincinnati, Ohio, n.pub., 1879.] 7pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 71. Hobart, Edwin L The Truth About Shiloh: A Compilation of Facts and Figures. An Analysis Reducing to a Percentage Basis all Losses in Every Command Engaged at Shiloh. Comparison of Losses in that Battle with Other Battles of the Civil War, and Other Wars, and a Complete Expose of the Numbers of Men Engaged on Both Sides and How Such Numbers are Made Up, in Union and Confederate Armies. [Denver, Colorado, n.pub., 1909.] 116pp./64pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 74. Howard, Samuel M. Fiftieth Anniversary of the Great Battle of Shiloh, Held at Pittsburg Landing, Tenn., April 6, 1912, by the National Association of Survivors. Oration by Samuel M. Howard of Gettysburg, South Dakota. [Gettysburg, South Dakota, n.pub., 1912.] 24pp. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 75. Howard, Samuel M. The Illustrated Comprehensive History of the Great Battle of Shiloh. [Kansas City, Missouri, Franklin Hudson Publishing Company], 1921. 317pp. Units engaged pages 40-48 and 53-56. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 79. National Association of Battle of Shiloh Survivors. Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Meeting of the National Association of Battle of Shiloh Survivors, Held at Pittsburg Landing, Tenn., April 6 and 7, 1908. Denver, Colorado, J. S. Paradis, [1908]. 31pp. D. 2953. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 80. Reed, David Wilson. Shiloh National Military Park Commission. The Battle of Shiloh and the Organizations Engaged. Compiled from the Official Records. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1903. 122pp. Units engaged pages 24-44. D. 2956. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 82. Reinhardt, Vic. A Drummer Boy of Shiloh. Terrell, Texas, n.pub., 1910. 12pp. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 83. Rice, DeLong. The Story of Shiloh. Nashville, Tennessee, Brandon Printing Company, 1919. 64pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 84. Rice, DeLong. The Story of Shiloh. [Jackson, Tennessee, McCowat-Mercer, 1924.] 70pp. D. 2958. NYP. Shiloh, TN. TN: 85. Rich, Joseph W. The Battle of Shiloh. Iowa City, Iowa, The State Historical Society of Iowa, 1911.134pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 87. Sherman, John. Battle of Pittsburg Landing•Volunteers of Ohio. Remarks of Hon. John Sherman of Ohio, in the Senate of the United States, May 9,1862. Washington, D.C., Scammel & Company, [1862]. 8pp. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 88. Stanton, B. Letter of Lieut. Gov. Stanton in Reply to Hon. Thos. Ewlng. Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State Journal, 1862. 25pp. D. 2962. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 89. Steele, Matthew F. Strategy and Military Geography and History Lecture No. IX. Shiloh Campaign. [Fort Leavenworth, Kansas], Department of Military Art, Infantry and Cavalry School, 1907. 29pp. D. 2963. MHR. Shiloh, TN. 21 Fiche Index TN: 90. United States. War Department. Letter of the Secretary of War, Transmitting, in Answer to a Resolution of the 9th of May, the Reports of the Officers in Command in Relation to the Recent Battles at Pittsburg Landing. [Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1862.] 275pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 94. Whittlesey, Charles. Gen. Wallace's Division•Battle of Shiloh•Was It Tardy? n.pl., n.pub., [1875]. 8pp. D. 2970. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 95. Worthington, Thomas. Abstract of Evidence, Etc., in the Proceedings of the Court Martial for the Trial of Col. T. Worthington, at Memphis, August 14th, 1862. n.pl., n.pub., [1862]. 8pp. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 96. Worthington, Thomas. The Blunders of the Rebellion and Their Dead-Sea Fruit, in Six Numbers, Bring a General Review of the Causes Which Protracted the War, Quadrupled Its Expense in Waste of Life, Money, and National Credit, and by the Rejection of All Method, Plan, or Providence In and Out of the Army, Has Precipitated Present Results and Future Danger to the Union. Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1869. 13pp. D. None. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 97. Worthington, Thomas. A Correct History of the Battle of Shiloh, Respectfully Dedicated to the Armies of the Ohio and the Tennessee; Their Living and Dead. Washington, D.C., Thomas McGill & Company, 1880. 91pp. D. None. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 99. Worthington, Thomas. Shiloh; or, The Tennessee Campaign of 1862; Written Especially for the Army of the Tennessee in 1862 and for the Friends and Relatives of Those Patriot Soldiers, Who Sank Into Their Graves on Shiloh's Field "Unknelled, Unnoticed, and Unknown." Washington, D.C., M'Gill & Witherow, 1872. 164pp. D. None MHR Shiloh, TN. Shiloh•Memorials TN: 101. Illinois. Shiloh Battlefield Commission. Illinois at Shiloh. Report of the Shiloh Battlefield Commission and Ceremonies at the Dedication of the Monuments Erected to Mark the Positions of the Illinois Commands Engaged in the Battle. The Story of the Battle by Stanley Waterloo. Chicago, Illinois, M. A. Donohue & Company, [1905]. 187pp./maps. Units engaged page 115. D. 2974. Civil War Library and Museum. Shiloh, TN. TN: 105. Beveridge, Albert J. Address of Albert J. Beveridge, U.S. Senator from Indiana, at the Dedication of Indiana's Monuments on the Battlefield of Shiloh, Tennessee, April 6, 1903. Indianapolis, Indiana, Press of Levey Bra's & Company, [1903]. 15pp. D. 2975. DLC. Shiloh, TN. TN: 106. Indiana. Indiana National Park Commission. [Coons, John W.] Indiana at Shiloh, Report of the Commission. Indianapolis, Indiana, [Wm. B. Burford], 1904. 310pp. Units engaged pages 161-162. D. None. HUL. Shiloh, TN. [See MS: 41. Cummins, Albert B. In the Matter of the Controversy Between the Shiloh National Military Park Commission and the Iowa Shiloh Commission Relating to Inscription Upon the Regimental Monuments of the 15th and 16th Iowa Volunteer Infantry Before the Secretary of War. Proof and Argument Presented By Albert B. Cummins, Governor of Iowa, n.pl., n.pub., [1903]. 59pp. D. 2976. DLC. Shiloh, TN.] TN: 111. Michigan. Shiloh Soldiers' Monument Commission. Michigan at Shiloh; Report of the Michigan Shiloh Soldiers' Monument Commission. Lansing, Michigan, Michigan Historical Commission, 1920. 27pp. D. 2979. NYP. Shiloh, TN. 22 Fiche Index TN: 112. Ohio. Shiloh Battlefield Commission. Ohio at Shiloh. Report of the Commission. Cincinnati, Ohio, C. J. Krehbiel & Company, 1903. 226pp. D. 2980. MHR. Shiloh, TN. TN: 116. Wisconsin. Shiloh Monument Commission. Wisconsin at Shiloh. Report of the Commission. Madison, Wisconsin, Democrat Printing Company, 1909. 257pp. D. 2982. MHR. Shiloh, TN; Spring Hill, TN. TN: 120. Shellenberger, John K. The Battle of Spring Hill, Tennessee, November 29, 1864. A Refutation of the Erroneous Statements Made by Captain Scofield in His Paper Entitled 'The Retreat from Pulaski to Nashville." Cleveland, Ohio, The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1913. 49pp. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Spring Hill, TN; Franklin, TN. Stones River TN: 121. Hascall, Milo Smith. Personal Recollections and Experiences Concerning the Battle of Stone River, A Paper Read by Request before the Illinois Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the U.S., at Chicago, III., Feb. 14, 1889. Goshen, Indiana, Times Publishing Company, 1889. 22pp. D. 2995. TNS. Stones River, TN. TN:122. Kendall, Henry M. The Battle of Stone River, n.pl., n.pub., [1903]. 14pp. D. None. DLC. Stones River, TN. TN: 123. Rosecrans, Williams S. Report of the Secretary of War, Communicating in Answer to a Resolution of the Senate of the 10th Instant, A Copy of Major General Rosecrans's Report of the Battle of Murfreesboro, or Stone River, Tennessee. Washington, D.C., Government Printing Office, 1863. 577pp./maps. Units engaged pages 19-24 and 39-44. D. 3002. Civil War Library and Museum. Stones River, TN. TN: 130. Stevens, Alexander F. The Battle of Stone's River near Murfreesboro, Tenn., December 30, 1862, to January 3,1863. Boston, Massachusetts, James R. Osgood and Company, 1884. 197pp./maps. Units engaged pages 153-191 and 195-197. D. None. Civil War Library and Museum. Stones River, TN. TN: 133. Thruston, Gates Phillips. Personal Recollections of the Battle in the Rear at Stone's River, Tenn. Nashville, Tennessee, Press of Brandon Printing Company, [1906]. 21pp. D. 3005. TNS. Stones River, TN. TN: 134. United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] The Stone River Campaign. Organization of the Fourteenth Army Corps, Department of the Cumberland (Major-General William S. Rosecrans, U.S.A., Commanding), December 26, 1862-January 5,1863. [Washington, D.C., n.pub., 1883.] 10pp. Units engaged pages 3-10. D. 3006. Civil War Library and Museum. Stones River, TN. TN:135. Vance, Wilson J. Stone's River: The Turning Point of the Civil War. New York, New York, Neale Publishing Company, 1914. 72pp. D. None. NYP. Stones River, TN. Tennessee River Campaign of 1862 TN: 136. The Material Bearing of the Tennessee Campaign... The Material Bearing of the Tennessee Campaign in 1862 Upon the Destinies of Our Civil War. Washington, D.C., W. H. Moore, [1862]. 19pp. D. 2527. DLC. Belmont, MO; Fort Donelson, TN; Shiloh, TN; New Orleans, LA; Corinth, MS; Vicksburg, MS; Mobile, AL. 23 Fiche Index TN:137. Carroll, Anna Ella. Miss Carroll's Claim Before Congress in Connection with the Tennessee Campaign of 1862. [Washington, D.C.], n.pub., [1873]. 55pp. D. 2530. MHR. Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; Shiloh, TN; New Orleans, LA. TN: 138. Scott, Charles M. The Origin of the Tennessee Campaign, As a Refutation of the Fraudulent Claim of Miss Anna Ella Carroll. Terre Haute, Indiana, Moore & Langen, 1889. 38pp. D. 2534. HUL. Belmont, MO; Fort Henry, TN; Fort Donelson, TN; Shiloh, TN. Trans-Mississippi General References TM: 1. Britton, Wiley. The Civil War on the Border (Volume 1). A Narrative of Operations in Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas and the Indian Territory During the Years, 1861-1862 Based Upon the Official Reports of the Federal Commanders Lyon, Sigel, Sturgis, Fremont, Halleck, Curtis, Schofield, Blunt, Herron and Totten, and of the Confederate Commanders McCulloch, Price, Van Dorn, Hindman, Marmaduke, and Shelby. New York, New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1890. 465pp. D. 19, Volume I, Part VI. MHR. Camp Jackson, MO; Boonville, MO; Carthage, MO; Wilson's Creek, MO; Lexington, MO; ChustoTalasah, Indian Territory; Independence, MO; Pea Ridge, AR; Lone Jack, MO; Newtonia, MO; Fort Wayne, Indian; Territory; Cane Hill, AR; Prairie Grove, AR; Springfield, MO; Guerrilla Operations in Missouri and Arkansas. TM: 7. Britton, Wiley. The Civil War on the Border (Volume 2). A Narrative of Military Operations in Missouri, Arkansas, and the Indian Territory, During the Years 1863-1865, Based on Official Reports and Observations of the Author. New York, New York, G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1899. 546pp. D. 22, Volume I, Part VI. MHR. Guerrilla Operations in Missouri and Arkansas; Fayetteville, AR; Fort Gibson, Indian Territory; Cabin Creek, Indian Territory; Honey Springs, Indian Territory; Lawrence, KS; Shelby's Raid in Missouri; Baxter Springs, AR; Expedition to Camden, AR; Poison Springs, AR; Jenkins' Ferry, AR; Centralia, MO; Price's Raid in Missouri; Pilot Knob, MO; Big Blue, MO. TM: 13. Connelley, W. E. Quantrill and the Border Wars. Cedar Rapids, Iowa, The Torch Press, 1910. 542pp. D. 273, Volume III MHR. Guerrilla Operations in Kansas; Guerrilla Operations in Missouri and Arkansas; Big Blue, MO; Lawrence, KS; Baxter Springs, AR. TM: 19. Dodge, Grenville Mellen. The Indian Campaign of Winter of 1864-1965. Written in 1877 by Major General Grenville M. Dodge and Read to the Colorado Commandery of the Loyal Legion of the United States at Denver, April 21, 1907. Denver, Colorado, n.pub., 1907. 21pp. D. 3137. Civil War Library and Museum. Operations Against Indian Uprising in the Department of the Missouri. TM: 20. McCorkle, John. Three Years with Quantrell: A True Story Told by His Scout, John McCorkle. Armstrong, Missouri, Armstrong Herald Print, 1914.157pp. D. 278, Volume III. DLC. Guerrilla Operations in Missouri and Arkansas; Lexington, MO; Independence, MO; Lone Jack, MO; Big Creek, MO; Little Blue, MO; Lamar, MO; Prairie Grove, AR; Westport, MO; Lawrence, KS; Baxter Springs, AR; Fayetteville, AR; Centralia, MO; Price's Raid in Missouri. 24 AUTHOR INDEX The following is a list of the individuals, officers, or military units that authored the histories found in Civil War Battles and Campaigns, Part 2. Following the long dash is an abbreviation, indicating in which segment the user will find the authored material. The specific number(s) of the authored item(s) follows the abbreviation. Confederate States of America. President MS: 1 Confederate States of America. War Department LA: 5, 8 Connelley, W. E. TM: 13 Connor, George C. TN: 6 Conyngham, David Power WT: 55 Cox, Jacob Dolson GA: 35; TN: 55; WT: 60 Cuffel, Charles A.• -MS: 50 Cummins, Albert B.- •MS: 41 MS: 37 Abemethy, AlonzoAdams, Henry Clay• -MS: 31 Allen, Theodore F. WT: 26 Anderson, Archer GA: 48 Anderson, Edward MO: 1 Andreas, A. T. TN: 67 Andrews, C. C. AL: 1 B Bailey, Lawrence Dudley- -KS: 1 Banks, R. W. TN: 54 Barnard, George N. WT: 45 (The Battle] Field of Shiloh TN: 66 Battles of Chattanooga, Fought November 23-25...TN:1 Baxter, William AR: 1 Beard, W. E. TN: 63 Belknap, Charles E. GA: 86 -TN: 105 Beveridge, Albert J. •KS:2 Boughton, Joseph S.• Bowman, Samuel M. WT: 46 Boynton, Henry Van Ness GA: 69, 75; TN: 4; WT:52 Bragg, Braxton [Confederate States of America. Army. Department of Tennessee] GA: 49 Brearley, W. H. TN: 27 Britton, Wiley TM: 1, 7 Brown, Joseph Emerson GA: 109 Brown, Joseph M.- -GA:4, 34, 110 Buell, Don Carlos- -WT:1 Butterfield, Daniel- -TN:5 Dedication of the Virginia Tablet in the...DePeyster, J. W. TN: 64 Disbrow, Albert GA: 81 Dodge, Grenville M. GA: 38; TM: 19 Drake, Charles D. MO: 6 Ewing, Thomas -MS: 51 TN: 68, 69 F Fenton, E. B. WT: 2 Fiske.John WT: 17 Fitch, John [Webster, B. F.]- -TN:7 Flinn, Frank LA: 1 Forbes, Stephen A. WT: 16 Force, Manning Ferguson MS: 2; WT: 3 Fry, James Barnet WT: 6 Georgia. [Smith, G. W.] GA: 1 Gillmore, Quincy Adams GA: 107 Gracie, Archibald GA: 52 Greene, Francis Vinton WT: 22 Gregg, Frank Moody GA: 9 Carroll, Anna Ella TN: 137 Chickamauga Memorial Association- -GA:80 Colfax, Schuyler MO: 5 Confederate States of America. House of Representatives TN: 32 H Hanly, James Frank- -MS: 36 Hascall, Milo Smith TN: 121 Hay, Thomas Robson TN: 60 Hedley, Fenwick Y. WT: 63 25 Author Index Henderson, Daniel Sullivan GA: 104 Hickenlooper, A. TN: 70 Hill, George W. GA: 5 Hinton, Richard J. MO: 38 Hitchcock, Henry WT: 69 Hobart, Edwin L. MS: 3; TN: 71 Hockersmith, Lorenzo WT: 27 Holcombe, R. I. MO: 45 Hosea, Lewis M. AL: 11 Howard, Samuel M. TN: 74, 75 Hubbard, Lucius F. MS: 4; WT: 9 Hutchinson, William F. AL: 5 McKee, James Cooper NM: 1 Meerheimb, F. V. GA: 116 Meigs, Montgomery C. TN: 9 Michigan. Shiloh Soldiers' Monument Commission TN: 111 N Nashville, Chattanooga, and St. Louis Railroad• GA: 11 National Association of Battle of Shiloh SurvivorsTN:79 Nichols, George Ward WT: 73 Norwood, C. W. GA: 85 Norwood, Charles W. GA: 59 I Illinois. Shiloh Battlefield Commission TN: 101 Illinois. Vicksburg Military Park Commission MS: 23 Illinois Central Railroad Company MS: 5 Indiana. Indiana National Park Commission. [Coons, JohnW.] TN: 106 Indiana. Morgan Raid Commission WT: 28 Iowa. Vicksburg Commission MS: 42 Oates, William Calvin TN: 26 Ohio. Commissioners to Examine Claims Growing Out of the Morgan Raid WT: 30 Ohio. Shiloh Battlefield Commission TN: 112 Ohio. Vicksburg Battlefield Commission MS: 45 Ohio Boys in Dixie, The Adventures of... GA: 7 Jenkins, Paul B. MO: 42 Johnston, Joseph E. MS: 6 Jones, Charles Colcock, Jr. GA: 2, 3, 111, 115 Panorama of the Battle of Missionary Ridge and... [Philadelphia Panorama Company] TN: 3 Parker, Foxhall A. AL: 6 Parker, Prescott A. AL: 8 Parton, James LA: 10 Payne, Eugene B. AR: 4 Peckham, James MO: 11 Pepper, George W. WT: 78 Peterson, Cyrus A. MO: 31 Pilot Knob Memorial Association •MO: 35, 36, 37 Pittenger, William GA: 12, 16, 20, 25 Poe, Orlando M. TN: 28 Polk, Leónidas MO: 26 Preston, F. W. LA: 21 K Kansas. Vicksburg National Park Memorial Commission MS: 43 Kelley, Leverett M. TN: 65 Kendall, Henry M. TN: 122 King, Charles P. WT: 29 Kniffin, Gilbert C. TN: 8 Leggett, M. D. GA: 40 Lexington Historical Society- -MO: 27 Logan, John A. MS: 9 Loring, William W. MS: 10 Loughborough, Mary Webster MS: 11 Louisiana. Governor. [Allen, Henry A.] LA: 4 Louisiana. Vicksburg Park Memorial CommissionMS:44 Ludlow, William GA: 6 Reed, David Wilson TN: 80 Reed, Samuel Rockwell MS: 14 Reid, Samuel Chester GA: 60, 61 Reinhardt, Vic TN: 82 Reunion of Survivors of the Andrews' Raiders.. GA:8 Rice, DeLong TN: 83, 84 Rich, Joseph W. TN: 85 Rigby, William Titus MS: 17, 18 Rodgers, Robert L. GA: 43 [Rood, Hosea Whitford] MS: 54 Rosecrans, William S. TN: 123 M Major, Duncan K.- -GA:41 Maps, Georgia, Northwestern, 1864... The Material Bearing of the Tennessee Campaign... TN: 136 McBryde, RandellW. GA: 10 McCorkle, John -TM: 20 McElroy, John MO: 7 McElroy, Joseph C. GA: 84, 92 GA: 33 Scott, Charles M. 26 TN: 138 Author Index United States. Army. [Adjutant General's Office.] GA:46, 47, 114; TN: 19,134 United States. Army. Military Division of the Missouri• •MO: 20 United States. Army. [War Records Office.] AL: 9; LA: 22 United States. Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park Commission TN: 20 United States. Conduct of the War, Joint Committee on the -TN: 30 United States. Navy Department LA: 17,19 United States. Smith (William Farrar), Board of Officers Upon the Claim of TN: 21 United States. Vicksburg National Military Park Commission MS: 20 United States. War Department TN: 90 Senour, F. WT: 35, 64 Severance, Margaret A. E. TN: 10 Shellenberger, John K. TN: 59, 120 Sheridan, Philip Henry TN: 11 Sherman, Ernest A. WT: 10 Sherman, John TN: 87 Sherman, William T.- -WT:89 Simmons, Flora E. WT: 40 Simms, Jeremiah H. WT: 41 Skinner, George Washington• <3A:96 Smith, William Farrar TN: 12 Snead, Thomas Lowndes MO: 16 Snowden, Yates WT: 92 Sosey, Frank H. MO: 28 South Carolina. Monument Commission- -GA: 105 Stanton, B. TN: 88 Steele, Matthew F. GA: 44; MS: 19; TN: 89 Stevens, Alexander F. TN: 130 Surbey, Richard W.• -WT: 12 Swift, Charles Jewett- •G A: 106 V Vance, Wilson J. Vilas, William F. TN: 135 MS: 21 w Webb, William Larkin MO: 21 Webster, Harrie AL: 10 West Virginia. Vicksburg Military Park Commission MS: 52 Whittlesey, Charles TN: 94 Williams, John Stuart TN: 29 Wilson, John Alfred GA: 30 Wisconsin. Shiloh Monument Commission Wood, Bradford R., Jr. TN: 25 Worthington, Thomas TN: 95, 96, 97, 99 Taylor, Benjamin F. TN: 16 Taylor, Benjamin Franklin TN: 13 Thruston, Gates Phillips TN: 133 Turchin, John Basil GA: 62 u U.S. General Service Schools, Fort Leavenworth, KS TN: 34, 38 United Confederate Veterans. Atlanta Camp GA:45 United States. Adjutant General's Office GA: 67, 68 27 TN: 116 MAJOR ENGAGEMENTS INDEX The following is a list of the major engagements found in this collection. The spellings of place names have been standardized. The Union names for battles are used (Shiloh instead of Pittsburg Landing, for example). In addition to the names of places where major engagements occurred, entries can be found under the name of an officer leading a campaign (Sherman's Campaign); expedition or raid (Andrews' Railroad Raid); and occasional names of states (Kentucky) and/or regions (Mississippi Valley) for general activities. Campaigns are generally listed under the place name associated with the overall campaign (Atlanta Campaign will be found under Atlanta, GA). Within each entry, the user will find a list of theater and/or state abbreviations whose histories discuss this engagement and, when appropriate, other items that are pertinent to the particular location, such as an expedition to it, etc. Standard two-letter state abbreviations are used. When engagements at a particular locale are broken down by date, these are arranged chronologically and are grouped together following any other pertinent entries forthat site. Within each entry, the theater/state abbreviation is followed by the specific item number(s) where mention of the main entry can be found. For example, the entry for the major engagement at Chattanooga, TN (Tennessee) is followed by TN: 1 (Western Theater has entries related to Chattanooga and these are listed as WT: 2). By referring to the Tennessee (TN) portion of the Fiche Index, found in the beginning of this guide, the user can then locate item 1 in which the engagement at Chattanooga is discussed. The abbreviation IT. is used for Indian Territory. These sources were consulted during compilation of the Major Engagements Index: Boatner, Mark M., Ill, The Civil War Dictionary, David McKay Company, Inc., New York, 1959. Faust, Patricia L, ed. Historical Times Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Civil War, Harper & Row, New York, 1986. McPherson, James M., ed., The Atlas of the Civil War, Macmillan, New York, 1994. Alexandria, LA expedition to•LA: 1 Allatoona, GA GA: 4, 5, 6, 35, 44 WT: 45, 55, 63, 73, 84, 89 Andrews' Railroad Raid GA: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 16, 20, 25, 30 Arkansas guerilla operations in•TM: 1, 7,13, 20 Arkansas Post, AR MS: 21, 23, 42, 45 WT:46 Atchafaiaya, LA expedition to•LA: 1, 4 Atlanta, GA GA: 3, 35, 38, 40, 43, 44, 45, 110 WT: 2, 10, 45, 55, 63, 73, 78, 89 campaign•<3A: 33, 34, 35, 41, 44, 45, 46, 47; WT: 17,46,52,84 Averysboro, NC WT: 55, 60, 63, 69, 73, 78, 84, 89 Baxter Springs, KS TM: 7, 13, 20 Bayou LaMourie, LA LA: 4 WT:9 Belmont, MO MO: 7, 26 TN: 136, 138 Bentonville, NC WT: 46, 52, 55, 60, 63, 69, 73, 78, 84, 89 Big Bethel, VA LA: 10 Big Black River, MS MS: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 11, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 31, 36, 37, 42, 45, 54 WT: 10 Big Blue, MO MO: 38, 42 TM:7, 13 Big Creek, MO TM:20 29 Major Engagements Index Blue Springs, TN TN: 28, 29 Booneville, MO MO: 7, 11,16, 21 TM:1 Brown's Ferry, TN GA:96, 81, 105 Buckhead Creek, GA GA:3, 115 Bull Run, VA (1st) WT: 46, 84 Cabin Creek, I.T. TM: 7 Camden, AR expedition to•TM: 7 Campbell's Station, TN TN: 27, 28 Camp Jackson, MO MO: 5, 6, 7,11, 16,21 TM:1 Campti, LA WT:9 Cane Hill, AR MO: 21 TM:1 Cane River Crossing, LA LA:1 WT:9 Carthage, MO MO: 7, 11, 16,21 TM:1 Cassville, GA WT:2 Cedar Creek, VA LA:1 Centralia, MO TM: 7, 20 Champion's Hill, MS MS: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23,31,36,37,42,45,51,54 WT: 10 Chariot, MO MO: 38 Chattahoochie River, GA GA: 34, 35, 41, 44, 110 WT: 10,45,55,63,78,89 Chattanooga, TN GA: 59, 69, 75, 81, 85, 86, 96, 105, 110 MS: 14, 37, 50 TN: 1,3,4,5,6,7,8,9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 16, 19,20, 21, 25, 26 WT:2, 10,45,55,78 campaign•WT: 17, 46, 52, 84, 89 Chickamauga, GA GA: 3, 48, 49, 52, 59, 60, 61, 62, 67, 68, 69, 75, 80, 81, 84, 85, 86, 92, 96, 104, 105, 110 TN: 1,3,4,6,7, 10,20,21,26 WT:17 Chickasaw Bayou, MS MS: 3, 4, 14, 19, 21, 23, 42, 45, 54 WT: 46, 52, 84 Chusto-Talasah, I.T. TM: 1 Columbia, SC GA: 106 WT:92 Corinth, MS TN: 136 WT: 1,3, 17,46,84 April 29-May 30, 1862•WT: 22 October 3-4, 1862•MS: 19; WT: 22, 52 Cumberland Gap, TN WT:1,6 Dug Springs, MO MO: 7,11, 16 Ebenezer Church, AL AL: 1 Ezra Church, GA GA:35, 44, 45, 110 WT: 45, 55, 63, 78, 89 Fayetteville, AR MO: 38 TM: 7, 20 WT: 63, 69, 73 Fisher's Hill, VA LA:1 Fort Bisland, LA LA: 1,4 Fort Blakely, AL AL: 1,8 WT:9 Fort DeRussy, LA WT:9 Fort Donelson, TN TN: 32, 34, 38, 136, 137, 138 WT: 1, 3, 22, 52 Fort Fillmore, NM NM: 1 Fort Fisher, NC WT: 46, 60 Fort Gibson, I.T. TM:7 Fort Henry, TN TN: 32, 34, 38, 137, 138 WT: 1, 3, 22, 52 30 Major Engagements Index Fort McAllister, GA GA: 2, 3,111 WT: 55, 63, 69, 73, 78, 84 Fort Pillow, TN TN:30 Fort Pulaski, GA GA:2, 3, 107 Fort Wayne, I.T. TM:1 Franklin, TN GA:44 TN: 54, 55, 59, 60, 63, 120 WT: 17,60 Fredericktown, MO MO: 7 Grand Gulf, MS MS: 5, 6, 14, 19, 21, 23, 37, 45, 54 WT: 10 Grierson's Raid in Mississippi and Louisiana•WT: 12,16 Griswoldsville, GA GA: 1,3,111, 115 Guerrilla Operations Kansas•MO: 20, 21 ; TM: 13 Missouri and Arkansas•TM: 1, 7, 13, 20 Helena, AR MO: 21 Holly Springs, MS MS: 4, 14, 19,21,23,45,54 Honey Hill, SC GA: 111,115 Honey Springs, I.T. TM:7 Independence, MO MO: 21, 38, 42 TM: 1, 20 Indians operations against•TM: 19 Indian Territory Cabin Creek•TM: 7 Chusto-Talasah•TM: 1 Fort Gibson•TM: 7 Fort Wayne•TM: 1 Honey Springs•TM: 7 Island No. 10, MO WT: 3, 22 luka, MS MS: 19 WT: 22, 52 Jackson, MS WT: 10 July 9-16, 1863•MS: 3 May 14, 1863•MS: 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 31, 36, 37, 42, 45, 54 Jenkins' Ferry, AR TM:7 Jonesboro, GA GA: 3, 35, 44, 45 WT: 45, 55, 63, 78, 89 Jonesboro, TN TN:29 Kansas guerilla operations in•MO: 20, 21 ; TM: 13 Kenesaw Mountain, GA GA: 3, 34, 35, 41, 44, 109, 110 WT:2, 10,45, 55, 63, 78, 89 Kentucky operations in, 1862•WT: 17 Kinston, NC WT:60 Knoxville, TN TN: 27, 28 Lake Providence, LA expedition to•MS: 2, 14, 19, 21, 23, 45, 54 Lamar, MO TM:20 Lawrence, KS TM:7, 13,20 Quantrell's Raid on•KS: 1, 2 Leasburg, MO MO: 31, 35, 36, 38 Lexington, MO MO: 5, 7, 21,27 TM: 1,20 October 19, 1864•MO: 38 Little Blue, MO MO: 38, 42 TM: 20 Little Osage, KS MO: 38 Lone Jack, MO MO: 21 TM: 1,20 Lookout Mountain, TN GA: 59, 69, 75, 81, 85, 86, 96, 110 MS: 14, 37, 50 TN: 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 13, 16, 19, 20, 25, 26 WT:2:, 10, 45 Louisiana, Western 'Teche" Campaign•LA: 1, 4 Lovejoy, GA GA:1 Mansura, LA WT:9 Marais des Cygnes, KS MO: 38 Mark's Mills, AR WT:9 31 Major Engagements Index Meridian, MS WT: 52, 84 Mill Springs, KY WT: 1 Mine Creek, KS MO: 38 Missionary Ridge, TN G A: 59, 69, 75, 81, 85, 86, 96, 105, 110 MS: 14, 37, 50 TN: 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 16, 19, 20, 25, 26 WT:2,10, 45 Missouri guerilla operations•TM: 1, 7, 13, 20 operations in, 1861•WT: 17 operations in, 1862•WT: 17 Price's Raid•MO: 20, 38; TM: 7, 20 Shelby's Raid•TM: 7 Missouri, Department of operations against Indians•TM: 19 Mobile, AL AL: 1,5,6,9, 10 TN: 136 WT:9 Moore's Plantation, LA WT:9 Morgan's Raids July 1863•WT: 12, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 35, 40, 41 in Kentucky•WT: 1 Munfordsville, KY WT: 1,6 Nashville, TN GA:44 TN: 60, 63, 64, 65 WT: 17,52,60 New Hope Church, GA GA:3, 34, 35, 41,44, 110 WT:2, 10,45,55,63,78,89 New Madrid, MO WT: 3, 22 New Orleans, LA LA: 5, 8, 10, 17, 19 TN: 136, 137 WT: 17,22 Newtonia, MO MO: 21, 38 TM:1 Orchard Knob, TN GA: 75, 81, 85, 86, 96 TN:20 Palmyra, MO MO: 28 Peachtree Creek, GA GA: 3, 35, 40, 41, 44, 45, 110 Pea Ridge, AR AR:1 GA:38 MO: 7, 21 TM:1 WT: 17 Perryville, KY WT: 1,6 Pilot Knob, MO MO: 31, 35, 36, 37, 38, 42 TM:7 Pleasant Hill, LA LA: 4, 21 WT:9 Poison Springs, AR TM:7 WT:9 Port Gibson, MS MS: 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 31, 37, 42, 45, 51, 54 Port Hudson, LA LA: 1,21 MS: 21, 23, 36, 45 WT:22 Port Royal, SC GA:2 Prairie Grove, AR AR: 1,4 MO: 21 TM: 1,20 Price's Missouri Raid MO: 20, 38 TM: 7, 20 Raymond, MS MS: 1, 2, 4, 6, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 31, 36, 42, 45, 51, 54 Red River Campaign LA: 22 Resaca, GA G A: 3, 34, 35, 41, 44, 110 WT:2, 10,45,55,63,78,89 Richmond, KY WT:6 Ringgold, GA TN: 1,5, 19,25 WT:45 Rocky Face Ridge, GA GA:41,44, 110 WT: 2, 45, 55, 63, 78, 89 Sabine Cross Roads, LA LA: 4, 21 WT:9 WT:2, 10,45, 55, 63, 78, 89 32 Major Engagements Index Savannah, GA GA: 111, 114, 115 WT: 69, 73, 78, 84, 89 Selma, AL AL 1,11 Shelby's Raid in Missouri TM:7 Sherman's Campaign Tennessee operations in, 1862•WT: 17 Tullahoma, TN TN:20 Tupelo, MS WT:9 Vicksburg, MS MS: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, 10, 11, 14, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23, 31, 36, 37, 42, 43, 44, 45, 50, 51, 52, 54 TN: 136 WT: 10 GA: 1,3,111, 114, 115, 116 WT: 45, 46, 52, 55, 60, 63, 69, 73, 78, 84, 89, 92 Shiloh, TN MS: 37, 41 TN: 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 74, 75, 79, 80, 82, 83, 84, 85, 87, 88, 89, 90, 94, 95, 96, 97, 99, 101, 105, 106,111, 112, 116, 136, 137,138 WT:1,3, 10, 17, 22, 46, 52, 84 Spanish Fort, AL AL: 1,8 WT:9 Springfield, MO TM: 1 Spring Hill, TN TN:55, 60, 63, 120 WT:60 State Line, MO MO: 38 Steele's Bayou, MS expedition to•MS: 2, 4,14, 19, 21, 23, 52, 54 Stones River, TN TN: 121, 123, 122, 130, 133, 134, 135 WT:17 campaign•WT: 17, 22, 46, 52, 84 Wauhatchie Valley, TN G A: 75, 81, 85, 96, 105 TN: 1,5,20 Waynesboro, GA GA:3, 115 Westport, MO MO: 21, 38, 42 TM:20 Wilson's Creek, MO AR: 1 GA: 38 MO: 5, 7, 11, 16,21,45 TM:1 Winchester, VA (3rd) LA: 1 Yazoo Pass, MS Expedition to•MS: 2, 4, 14, 19, 21, 23, 54 Yellow Bayou, LA WT:9 33 CIVIL WAR BATTLES AND CAMPAIGNS Official Histories and Personal Narratives Part 1. Eastern Theater Part 2. Western Theater Part 3. General References and Collected Works CIVIL WAR UNIT HISTORIES Regimental Histories and Personal Narratives Part 1. The Confederate States of America and Border States Part 2. The Union•New England Part 3. The Union•Mid-Atlantic Part 4. The Union•Midwest and West Part 5. The Union•Higher and Independent Commands and Naval Forces UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA