The History of Civil War Artillery and Battery B

CannonUnit History

CannonBattery B at the Battle of Antietam, September 17, 1862

CannonBattery B at the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863

CannonBattery B at the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863 (by Capt. James Stewart)

CannonBattery B at the Battle of Bethesda Church, June 1-3, 1864

CannonBattery B's Association with the Iron Brigade

CannonThe Artillery Battery

CannonHorsepower Moves the Guns

CannonThe Medal of Honor

CannonCannon Carriages

CannonArtillery Chain of Command

CannonPositions and Duties

CannonThe Order of St. Barbara

CannonMolly Pitcher

CannonThe Commanding Officers of Battery B

CannonIron Brigade Men who Served with Battery B

CannonNon-Iron Brigade Causalities from Battery B

CannonThe Library

CannonUnit Roster in 1861

CannonBiographies of Original Battery B Soldiers

CannonLetters From the Front

CannonPrincipal Dimensions and Weights of Field-Gun Carriages and Limbers

CannonArtillery Test

CannonArtillery Quotes

CannonOfficers of the 4th U.S. Artillery

CannonThe Cannoneer Pictures

CannonArtillery Ammunition

CannonCivil War Artillery Histories

CannonOrder of Encampment for a Battery of Artillery

CannonOrganization, Material, and Service of the Field Artillery

CannonArtillery Colors

CannonThe U.S. Army’s Mormon Expedition of 1857

CannonThe Regular Army Artillery on the Eve of the Civil War

CannonThe U.S. Artillery from the Civil War to the Spanish-American War, 1861-1898

CannonThe Taking of Coamo During the Spanish-American War

CannonThe Battle of Antietam: The Creation of Artillery Hell

CannonDeath Notices of John Cook

CannonThe Woodruff Gun

CannonThe Mountain Howitzer

CannonThe Development of Indirect Fire

CannonThe Athens Double-Barreled Cannon

CannonLee's Artillery Prepares for Picket's Charge

CannonCivil War Field Artillery

Cannon1st Independent Battery, New Hampshire Volunteer Light Artillery


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