Results for Artillery
“For God’s sake, why is the Artillery here not being made use of
In front of you is the Upper Works, and inside were two fl...
Battery A, 1st Ohio Light Artillery
McCook's Division
(Front):Ohio
Battery A
Union Artillery
The Federals crossed three pieces of artillery to Ball’s B...
1st Battalion 178th Field Artillery
To our Guardsmen and Families
of the 1 BN 178 FA:
Troup Light Artillery
Organized in 1858 as the National Artillery, this unit cha...
Federal Artillery
From a point 50 yards
west three batteries of
...
Stones River Artillery Monument
On January 2nd, 1863 at 3:00 P.M.
there were station...
Chew’s Ashby Artillery
Captain R. Preston Chew organized Chew’s Ashby Artillery, ...
Mell Rifles & Troup Light Artillery
(Front Side): The Mell Rifles, Co. D, Cobb’s Legion ...
Battery K, Fifth U.S. Artillery
Twelfth Corps
Army of the Potomac
Twelfth Corp...
Results for Artillery
“For God’s sake, why is the Artillery here not being made use of
In front of you is the Upper Works, and inside were two flank batteries, each with large ship guns. Lieutenant John Roberts of the Royal Artillery went to the left battery, nearest the bay, after the first shots of the ...
Battery A, 1st Ohio Light Artillery
McCook's Division
(Front):Ohio
Battery A
1st Light Artillery
commanded by
Capt. W.F. Goodspeed
McCook's (2d) Division
Army of the Ohio
(Back):
This battery arrived on the field about 2 p.m. April 7, 1862 too late to be engaged.
Marker is on Pittsburg Landing Road, on the right when traveling west. ...
Union Artillery
The Federals crossed three pieces of artillery to Ball’s Bluff. Two mountain howitzers from the 2nd New York State Militia, detached under Lt. Frank French of Battery I, 1st U.S. Artillery, occupied this area for much of the afternoon. A ...
1st Battalion 178th Field Artillery
To our Guardsmen and Families
of the 1 BN 178 FA:
In appreciation for your sacrifices,
bravery and loyalty during
Operation Iraqi Freedom
(2004-2005)
From the Citizens of Georgetown County
Marker is on South Fraser Street (U.S. 17), on the right when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Troup Light Artillery
Organized in 1858 as the National Artillery, this unit changed its name to the Troup Light Artillery in honor of the former Georgia governor George W. Troup. It became a part of Cobb’s Legion when the war began. During the ...
Federal Artillery
From a point 50 yards
west three batteries of
artillery under Major
J. A. Reynolds shelled
the Confederate first
line of earthworks.
Marker is on Burnett Road (North Carolina Route 82) ¾ mile north of Overcreek Lane, on the right when traveling south.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Stones River Artillery Monument
On January 2nd, 1863 at 3:00 P.M.
there were stationed on this hill
fifty-eight cannon commanding the field
across the river, and as the Confederates
advanced over this field, the shot and shell
from these guns resulted in a loss of
eighteen-hundred killed and wounded
in less ...
Chew’s Ashby Artillery
Captain R. Preston Chew organized Chew’s Ashby Artillery, the first “horse artillery” in the Confederate army, in November 1861. He named it for Colonel Turner Ashby. Chew’s battery bosted a 3 in ordinance rifle, a 12-pounder smoothbore howitzer, and an ...
Mell Rifles & Troup Light Artillery
(Front Side): The Mell Rifles, Co. D, Cobb’s Legion Infantry, was raised in Athens, GA. in July 1861, by Patrick Hues Mell, Baptist minster and Vice Chancellor of the University of Georgia. After Mell resigned due to his wife’s death, ...
Battery K, Fifth U.S. Artillery
Twelfth Corps
Army of the Potomac
Twelfth Corps
Battery K Fifth U.S. Artillery
Four 12 Pounders
Lieut. David H. Kinzie Commanding
July 1 Marched to within a mile and half of Gettysburg.
July 2 At daylight took position to command a gap between the First and Twelfth ...