Page:History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century Volume 2.djvu/20

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Chapter Contents Pages
  Department of the Gulf—The Battle of Pleasant Hill—A Graphic Description of the Conflict—Heroic Fighting of the Thirty-second—Shaw’s Brigade Bears the Brunt of the Battle—Banks orders a Retreat. 311-323
XXV The Thirty-third Iowa Volunteers—Samuel A. Rice its First Colonel—At Helena and Yazoo Pass—The Battle of Helena—In the Little Rock and Camden Expeditions—Colonel Rice Mortally Wounded at Jenkins’s Ferry—At Mobile and New Orleans.

The Thirty-fourth Iowa Volunteers—Sickness and Suffering at Helena an Chickasaw Bayou—Horrors of the Voyage up the Mississippi—Joins Grant’s Army in the Vicksburg Campaign—Services in Louisiana and Texas—Capture of Forts Gains, Morgan and Powell—the Regiment Consolidated with the Thirty-eighth.

325-335
XXVI The Thirty-fifth Iowa Volunteers—Sent to General Grant’s Department—Serves in Mississippi and Tennessee—Transferred to the Department of the Gulf—The Capture of Post at Henderson—In the Battles of Pleasant Hill and Yellow Bayou—Battle of the Old Red River and Tupelo—The Battle of Nashville-Iowa Regiments Engaged—Death of Colonel Hill—The Thirty-fifth at Mobile.

The Thirty-sixth Iowa Volunteers—Sickness and Suffering in the Swamps—In the Yazoo Expedition—In the Battle of Helena and Steele’s Expedition—The Battle of Mark’s Mill—Most of the Regiment Captured.

337-349
XXVII The Thirty-seventh Iowa volunteers—Made up of Men Exempt by Age from Military Duty—Services on Picket, Guard and Garrison—Patriotic Services Commended.

The Thirty-eighth Iowa Volunteers—At the Siege of Vicksburg—The Regiment Prostrated by Sickness—In Texas and the Mobile Campaign—Consolidated with the Thirty-fourth.