The following Union Army units and commanders fought in the Battle of Hatcher's Run (February 5-7, 1865) during the Petersburg campaign of the American Civil War. Order of battle is compiled from the official tabulation of casualties and includes only units which sustained casualties.[1]
Abbreviations used
Military rank
- MG = Major General
- BG = Brigadier General
- Col = Colonel
- Ltc = Lieutenant Colonel
- Maj = Major
- Cpt = Captain
Other
- w = wounded
- m = mortally wounded
- k = killed
- c = captured
Army of the Potomac
II Corps
Division | Brigade | Regiments and Others |
---|---|---|
First Division [not engaged] |
4th Brigade
Col John Ramsey |
|
Second Division
|
1st Brigade
Col William A. Olmsted |
|
2nd Brigade
Col Mathew Murphy (mw) 5 Feb |
| |
3rd Brigade
Ltc Francis E. Pierce |
| |
Unattached |
| |
Third Division
|
1st Brigade |
|
2nd Brigade
BG George W. West |
| |
3rd Brigade
BG Robert McAllister |
|
V Corps
Escort: 4th Pennsylvania Cavalry, Company C
Provost Guard: 104th New York
Division | Brigade | Regiments and Others |
---|---|---|
First Division
|
1st Brigade
Bvt BG Horatio G. Sickel |
|
2nd Brigade
Col Allen L. Burr |
| |
3rd Brigade
Bvt BG Alfred L. Pearson |
| |
Second Division
|
1st Brigade
Zouave Brigade Bvt BG Frederick Winthrop |
|
2nd Brigade
Col Richard N. Bowerman |
| |
3rd Brigade
Bvt BG James Gwyn |
| |
Third Division
|
1st Brigade |
|
2nd Brigade
BG Henry Baxter |
| |
3rd Brigade
Bvt BG Henry A. Morrow (w) |
|
VI Corps
Division | Brigade | Regiments and Others |
---|---|---|
First Division |
1st Brigade [not engaged] | |
2nd Brigade
Col James Hubbard |
| |
3rd Brigade |
| |
Second Division [not engaged] |
||
Third Division [not engaged] |
Cavalry
Division | Brigade | Regiments and Others |
---|---|---|
First Division [not engaged] |
||
Second Division
|
1st Brigade |
|
2nd Brigade
BG John Irvin Gregg (w) |
| |
3rd Brigade
Col Oliver B. Knowles |
References
- ↑ "Return of casualties in the Union forces at Hatcher's Run (otherwise known as Dabney's Mill, Armstrong's Mill, Rowanty Creek, and Vaughan Road) and Fort Stedman". The Siege of Petersburg Online. Retrieved 24 October 2012.