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Saving the Army: The 115th Illinois on Horseshoe Ridge

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  T he arrival of General James Steedman's division atop Horseshoe Ridge on the afternoon of Sunday, September 20, 1863, in General Thomas' estimation, saved the Union army at Chickamauga. Few of the troops of the Reserve Corps had seen much combat, among them the subject of today's post the 115th Illinois Volunteer Infantry.       Raised in September 1862 from several counties in the center of the state, the regiment spent it first months in the service on rear area duty in Kentucky before joining the main army in February 1863. It saw its first action at Franklin on April 10, 1863, then participated in the Tullahoma campaign.       The Reserve Corps held open the vital road at Rossville on the first day of the battle before moving to the front the following day. As remembered by Frank Gates of Co. K, the regiment double quicked to the front and came under fire as soon as they arrived on the ridge. " The ball opened in dead earnest, the bullets from our own and the en

Into the Wilderness of Pines: Opening Day on the Left at Chickamauga

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  A fter marching all night, the men of the 31st Ohio stacked arms near LaFayette Road on the morning of Saturday September 19, 1863 were a "sleepy, dusty bunch of boys" recalled Sergeant Samuel McNeil. " The boys were short of hardtack and judging by the appearance of their jaded horses, our 4 th  Michigan Battery must have been short of oats. General Thomas, erect and silent as ever, rode by. Perhaps our old hero was not so much to blame as the lamented Colonel Dan McCook for our going into the fight without the usual tin cup of coffee. Let that be as it may, there came the unwelcome order “Fall in!” As the regiment took arms we heard the first, but not the last, of the now historical Confederate brigade that Colonel McCook had found isolated on our side of the Chickamauga near Reed’s Bridge."           Sergeant McNeil’s account of the September 19, 1863 fighting at Chickamauga first saw publication in the April 14, 1887 edition of the National Tribune .

A Librarian's First Battle: At Mill Springs with the 2nd Minnesota

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       Samuel Pearce Jennison was working as the state librarian of Minnesota in the spring of 1861 when the Civil War began. At the call to arms, he joined the 2nd Minnesota Volunteer Infantry and was commissioned as regimental adjutant reporting to Colonel Horatio P. Van Cleve. The regiment joined the Army of the Ohio in Kentucky in October 1861 and first smelled powder on January 19, 1862 at the Battle of Mill Springs.     After hurriedly being called into line that morning, the 2nd Minnesota marched to the front. " We got down about three quarters of a mile and formed in line of battle," the former librarian wrote. "While standing in that position, three cannon shots were fired over the line and struck a few rods from us. That showed the fellows were in earnest, previous to which I supposed it was only a feint to alarm us." The Minnesotans approached the line being held by the 10th Indiana and 4th Kentucky intended to relieve them, but when those two regiments f

Firm as an Iron Pillar: A Hoosier Describes the Battle of Franklin

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J ohn Hetfield of the 129th Indiana recorded the horrors of the Franklin battlefield on the night of November 30, 1864. " They were killed in such great numbers that acres of ground before our works were covered with the dead and wounded," he wrote. "They were piled in the ditch on some parts of the field four to six men deep, the dead on the living and the living on the dead. These poor misguided wretches in their misery called and pleaded for help, for mercy, for water, but no helping hand could be found for they still charged and recharged our works, running over their dead and wounded. We could not help them but attended to the living Rebs yet before us giving hot lead and cold steel until 12 o’clock at night."     The 129th Indiana was part of Colonel Orlando Moore's Second Brigade of General Thomas Ruger's Second Division of the 23rd Army Corps. The Hoosiers served alongside the 107th Illinois , 80th Indiana , 23rd Michigan, 111th Ohio , and 118th Ohio

I Could Not Ride Without Stepping On the Bodies: A Hoosier Colonel at Shiloh

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I t was three weeks after the Battle of Shiloh before Lieutenant Colonel Joseph B. Dodge of the 30th Indiana had time to give his wife a hurried account of the engagement. He struggled to find the words to describe what he saw. " You can have no idea of the awful slaughter that took place," he wrote.  "There were actually places where you could walk (had you been so inclined) 30 rods straight ahead on the bodies of dead Rebels. In one place I saw them so thick one quite a large piece of ground that I could not ride through on account of my horse stepping on them.  I got off wonderfully: a Minie ball cut the hair off the back part of my head, another went through one of the men and struck me on the calf of my leg doing no damage further than making it feel as if somebody had thrown a stone and hit me. A buckshot went through my pants close to my knee." Colonel Dodge numbered among the lucky ones: the 30th Indiana lost 129 officers and men in the fight including Colon

The Earth Seemed to Rock Beneath Me: A Blue and Gray View of the Crater

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 " The first we heard was a low, rumbling sound and in looking up that way we could see human beings, timber, dirt, etc. ascending into the air, the fort being only one-half mile from us and in plain sight. Immediately after the explosion, the artillery from one end of the line to the other began such a cannonading as has not been heard since the siege of Vicksburg." ~ Sergeant Samuel Ransom, 150th Pennsylvania     A t first light on the morning of July 30, 1864, soldiers from the 48th Pennsylvania lit the fuse to an enormous mine that the men had dug beneath a portion of the Confederate lines at Petersburg, Virginia. The resulting explosion blew a ghastly hole 170 feet long, 100 feet wide, and more than 30 feet deep, killing nearly 300 Confederate troops outright. The Federals planned to storm the breach with General James Ledlie's entire division and thus break the siege of Petersburg. But the attack bogged down and the men charged into the crater instead of around it,

The Informal Truce: Trading Coffee and Sugar after Ezra Church

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  A fter three months of campaigning in the summer of 1864, John Myers of the 55th Illinois described how the men of both armies embarked on an informal truce after one of the bloodiest battles of the Atlanta campaign, Ezra Church, in late July 1864.         " The pickets have kept up a continual fire which almost amounted to a battle until last evening when it ceased, and they commenced trading coffee and sugar," he wrote. "This morning we find a few of our pickets missing. Having gone into the Rebel lines to trade they were retained as prisoners while some of their men have come in and given themselves up. As it is unsafe to be fired at, both sides agree to allow the truce to remain unbroken. The Rebels come out in plain view and box and wrestle, and our boys get upon the works and look at them. On one occasion today their artillery opened on us with all its fury when we were in plain sight, but they hurt no one and besides injuring our works somewhat they only showe