COMPANIES Killed & Died of Wounds Died of Disease, in Prison Total
Officers Men Total Officers Men Total Enrollment
Field &
Staff ...1...............1.......................................16
Company A ...........14.....14...........1........24.....25.........113
B ...1.......10.....11....................22.....22.........120
C ...1.......12.....13....................21.....21.........113
D ...1.......16.....17....................20.....20.........115
E ...........10.....10...........1........15.....16.........110
F ...1.......15.....16....................14.....14.........120
G ...2.......10.....12....................10.....10.........105
H ...2........9.....11....................22.....22.........110
I ............8......8....................20.....20.........106
K ............8......8....................24.....24.........106
Totals ...9......112....121...........2.......192....194........1434
121 killed = 10.6 per cent.
Total of killed and wounded, 423.
BATTLES Killed & Mortally Wounded
Fort Bisland, La. ............................3..............
Port Hudson, La., June 14, 1863..............21..............
Port Hudson Trenches, La. ....................7..............
Sabine Cross Roads, La. .....................2..............
Pleasant Hill, La. ..........................3..............
Opequon, Va. ...............................44..............
Cedar Creek, Va. ...........................38..............
Guerillas ...................................1..............
Place unknown ...............................2..............
Present also at Cane River, Mansura, Fisher's Hill.
NOTES.--- Organized at Norwich, N.Y., leaving there on September 6, 1862, and
journeying to Binghamton on canal boats, a long line of them being used for the
purpose. Seven of the companies had been recruited in Chenango county, and
three in Madison. The regiment sailed from Baltimore on November 6, 1862, for
New Orleans, where it was assigned to Weitzel's Brigade, Augur's Division,
Nineteenth Corps, and stationed at Brashear City, La.
Its first experience under fire was at Fort Bisland, April 12, 1863, where
several men were wounded, some of them mortally. After the Teche Campaign. --a
march through "the garden of Louisiana."--the One Hundred and Fourteenth, on
May 30, 1863, joined its Corps, which had already invested Port Hudson, and for
forty days participated in the incessant fighting which echoed through the
magnolia woods about the works. In the grand assault of June 14th, Colonel
Smith, while in command of the brigade, was killed. The total loss of the
regiment during the siege of Port Hudson was 11 killed, 60 wounded, and 2
missing.
On March 15, 1864.---in Dwight's (1st) Brigade, Emory's (1st) Division.---
it started on Banks's Red River campaign, traversing the Teche country for the
sixth time, and fighting at Sabine Cross Roads, where Lieutenant-Colonel Morse,
the regimental commandant, was wounded. The Nineteenth Corps having been
ordered to Virginia, the One Hundred and Fourteenth embarked for Washington on
July 15, 1864, and after marching through Maryland, fought under Sheridan in
his famous Shenandoah campaign against Early. At the battle of the Opequon,
the regiment lost 185 men killed and wounded -- three-fifths of those engaged
-- eliciting by its gallantry a complimentary notice from the Division General.
At Cedar Creek it lost 21 killed, 80 wounded, and 8 missing. The regiment was
mustered out at Elmira on June 17, 1865.
Maintained by Sue Greenhagen. E-mail: greenhsh@morrisville.edu