David Hope, First Lieutenant, wounded, leg and head;
John Bulford, Third Lieutenant, wounded;
Henry Roebuck, Master’s Mate, wounded;
George Greenway, Midshipman, wounded;
Francis Baker, “first-class volunteer,” wounded.
Of the crew, 36 killed and 68 wounded, of whom two seamen died of wounds, and two boys had each one leg amputated. Nine Marines also were wounded.
Aboard the United States:
Second Lieutenant John M. Funck, mortally wounded; one seaman mortally wounded; five seamen badly wounded.
(Unless the five all died, Captain Carden’s statement in his official despatch home, “I saw a lieutenant and six seamen thrown overboard,” was unfounded.)
[12] John B. Nicholson.