Next Prev Next Enter Your Search Terms Below Putting your search in quotes will search on the entire phrase - like "15th New Jersey". Limit to the first 10 20 50All results. Fox's Regimental Losses REGIMENTAL LOSSES IN THE CIVIL WAR. FORTIETH INDIANA INFANTRY. WAGNER'S BRIGADE — SHERIDAN'S DIVISION — FOURTH CORPS. (1) COL. WILLIAM 0. WILSON. (2) COL. JOHN W. BLAKE. (3) COL. HENRY LEAMING. 148 killed=io per cent. Total of killed and wounded 551 BATTLES. K. & M.W. Shiloh, Term., April 15, 1862 i Perryville, Ky i Stone's River, Tenn i o Lookout Mountain, Tenn 2 Missionary Ridge, Tenn 39 Resaca, Ga 4 Adairsville, Ga i Dallas, Ga 9 Present, also, at Corinth ; Jonesboro ; Lovejoy's Station. BATTLES. K. & M.W Pine Mountain, Ga.... 7 Kenesaw Mountain, Ga 4 Assault on Kenesaw 37 Peach Tree Creek, Ga 8 Siege of Atlanta, Ga 4 Franklin, Tenn 17 Nashville, Tenn 4 NOTES. — Organized at Lafayette, Ind., in December, 1861, and ordered immediately into Kentucky, where it went into a Camp of Instruction near Bardstown. In February, 1862, it moved with BuelPs Army on its various campaigns in Kentucky and Tennessee, having been assigned to Wagner's Brigade of Wood's Division, in which it was present at Shiloh, but not under fire. Wood's (6th) Division participated in the campaigns of the Army of the Ohio in 1862, the occupation of Tennessee, and the retreat into Kentucky. The regiment was engaged at Stone's River, where it lost 4 killed, 68 wounded, and 13 missing. The brigade was absent at Chick-amauga, it having been detailed, just at that time, on duty at Chattanooga, and left behind as the army passed through. Upon the re-organization of the Army of the Cumberland, October 20, 1863, the regiment was assigned to Wagner's (2d) Brigade, Sheridan's (zd) Division, Fourth Corps, in which command it fought at Missionary Ridge, where it sustained a loss of 20 killed and 138 wounded; total, 158. During the Atlanta campaign, Gen eral Newton commanded the division, and in the unsuccessful assault on Kenesaw Mountain the regiment met with another severe loss, the percentage of casualties being very large. At the battle of Franklin. General Wag ner commanded the division, and Colonel John Q. Lane the brigade. After the battle at Nashville the regiment remained in winter-quarters near that city until the spring of 1865, when, the war having closed, it was ordered to New Orleans. From there it went with the Fourth Corps to Texas, where it joined Sheridan's Army of Occu pation, remaining there until December 21, 1865, when it was mustered out. _10075