Company D. Killed.—Sergeant Stephen T. Brooks (commanding Company), Corporal Alden J. Sawtell, Privates Samuel B. Hale, Peter Breen, Dennis Hare. Died of Wounds.—Private Sanford Giles. Wounded.—Corporal Courtland A. Allen, Privates John M. Demary, Edwin W. Lund, Augustus S. Whitney, William L. Renouf.
Company E. Wounded.—Privates William F. Whitney, Joseph B. Wheelock.
Company F. Wounded.—Corporals Ammiel Littlefield, Orrick H. Adams.
Company G. Killed.—Corporal William H. Hall. Died of Wounds.—Private John S. Emerson. Wounded.—Private Andrew B. Fletcher.
Company H. Killed.—Sergeant Jerome Pierce, Private Lewis D. Winslow. Died of Wounds.—Private Eugene W. Hodgman. Wounded.—Sergeant John A. Fisher, Private Augustus F. Colburn.
Company I. Died of Wounds.—Private Franklin Farnsworth. Wounded.—First Sergeant Alonzo A. White (commanding Company), Privates Savillion Arnold, Luke Lavin, Hazen D. Leighton, John A. Bosworth.
Company K. Died of Wounds.—Private Samuel G. Vaughn (wounded in Wilderness, but had returned to duty). Private Matthew Hudson (captured and died in rebel prison at Florence, S.C.). Wounded.—Sergeant Edward Chamberlain, Privates Silas Chamberlain, Henry Noi (wounded May 6, but had returned to duty).
Names of killed and wounded of Twenty-Ninth Massachusetts Volunteers, serving with the Thirty-Sixth Regiment May 12th, 1864.
Killed.—Sergeants Hamer and Mosher, Privates Alexander, Fisher, Ward, Morton,[15] Murphy, and Mansfield. Wounded.—Privates Adams, Willett, Feeney, Little, Guiney, Mitchell, Hamlin, Parsons, McAloney, Hoxie, Thresher, and Thompson.
[15] Lemuel Morton had a presentiment that he should be killed in this battle. He had but two days more to serve to complete an honorable record of three years. He was the first man killed in the engagement, falling at the first fire, before the regiment entered the woods.