WOUNDED.

First Lieutenant George W. Pope, Company G, mortally.

First Lieutenant Charles A. Carpenter, Company H.

First Sergeant John Lucas, Company B, badly in wrist.

Sergeant H. B. Titus, Company G.

Sergeant John H. Hancock, Company H, arm shot off.

Corporal John M. Thompson, Company B, both legs broken, and afterwards died.

Corporal William H. Tindal and Musician James Liffin,[50] Company F.

Privates Thomas W. Cashman, Company A; Emery Hodgkins, Company B; William H. Burns, Joseph W. Glass, Napoleon Mason, John Harvey, Timothy Hayes, and George F. Browne, Company F; Daniel Whitmore, Richard Owen, Philip A. Lawall, Warren Crowell, and Edward Carney, Company G; William Jones, Company H; and William H. Howe, Company K.

It is said on good authority, that every third man in the attacking column was either killed or wounded, a fact that shows how sanguinary was the battle.