Capt. P. B. Anderson
Capt. E. Bogardus
Capt. Thomas Glenn
Capt. J. M. Scantland
Capt. J. P. Breedlove
Capt. J. W. Perkins
Capt. C. T. Huddlestone
1st Lt. James Blackburn
1st Lt. Thomas Shields
1st Lt. H. B. Kelly
1st Lt. R. Humphreys
1st Lt. Thomas Smith
1st Lt. N. McClannahan
1st Lt. A. J. McAllon
2nd Lt. Richard Steele
Wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. B. Davis
Serving as ordnance officer, Aug. 19–20, Pillow’s division
2nd W. H. Seawell
2nd Lt. R. W. Bedford
2nd Lt. Perrin Watson
2nd Lt. A. J. Isaacs
2nd Lt. A. J. Hudson
2nd Lt. J.C.C. Hays
2nd Lt. S. T. Love
Voltigeurs
Col. T. P. Andrews
Commanding Regiment
Lt. Col. J. E. Johnston
Major G. A. Caldwell
Major G. H. Talcott
Wounded at Molino del Rey, Sep. 8
Capt. A. P. Churchill
Capt. O. E. Edwards
Capt. James D. Blair
Capt. Charles J. Biddle
Capt. John E. Howard
Capt. M. J. Barnard
Capt. J. J. Archer
1st Lt. B. D. Fry
1st Lt. James Tilton
1st Lt. A. H. Cross
1st Lt. H. C. Longnecker
1st Lt. W. S. Walker
2nd Lt. Charles F. Vernon
Resigned
2nd Lt. R. C. Forsyth
2nd Lt. T. D. Cochran
2nd Lt. Robert Swan
2nd Lt. George R. Kiger
2nd Lt. G. S. Kintzing
2nd Lt. Wm. J. Martin
2nd Lt. J. H. Smythe
2nd Lt. James R. May
2nd Lt. Edwin C. Marvin
2nd Lt. Robert H. Archer
2nd Lt. Washington Terrett
2nd Lt. F. H. Larned
2nd Lt. James E. Slaughter
Mountain Howitzer Battery
1st Lt. F. D. Callender
Wounded on Aug. 19
2nd Lt. J. L. Reno
Wounded on Sep. 13
Division of Volunteers
(Shields’s Brigade and 2nd Pa. Volunteers)
Major Gen. John A. Quitman
Commanding Division
1st Lt. Mansfield Lovell, 4th Artillery
A.D.C. & Acting Asst. Adj. General
2nd Lt. C. M. Wilcox, 7th Infantry
A.D.C.
Shields’s Brigade
Brig. Gen. James Shields
Commanding Brigade
Bvt. Capt. F. M. Page
Asst. Adj. General
1st Lt. R. P. Hammond
A.D.C.
1st Lt. G.T.M. Davis
Vol. A.D.C.
Marine Corps.
Lt. Col. S. E. Watson
Major Levi Twiggs
Killed near Chapultepec on Sep. 13
Major William Dulany
Capt. J. G. Reynolds
Capt. G. H. Terrett
1st Lt. D. D. Baker
1st Lt. J. S. Devlin
Vol. Aide-de-Camp to Gen. Shields
1st Lt. R. C. Caldwell
Commissary of Pillow’s division
1st. Lt. W. L. Young
1st Lt. J. C. Rich
2nd Lt. D. J. Sutherland
2nd Lt. F. Norvell
2nd Lt. J. S. Nicholson
2nd Lt. A. S. Nicholson
2nd Lt. C. G. McCauley
2nd Lt. Thomos Y. Field
2nd Lt. E. McDonald Reynolds
2nd Lt. J. D. Simms
2nd Lt. C. A. Henderson
New York Volunteers
Col. Ward B. Burnett
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
Lt. Col. Charles Baxter
Mortally wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
Major J. C. Burnham
Capt. C.H.S. Shaw
Resigned
Capt. James Barclay
Capt. J. P. Taylor
Capt. D. P. Hungerford
Capt. M. Fairchild
Capt. Sam’l S. Gallagher
Capt. Charles H. Peirson
Mortally wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
Capt. Van O’Linda
Killed at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
Capt. G. Dykeman
Severely wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
Capt. J. F. Hutton
Commissary
1st Lt. R. A. Carter
Adjutant
1st Lt. C. H. Sherwood
Resigned
1st Lt. A. W. Taylor
1st Lt. C. H. Innis
Wounded at Belén Gate, Sep. 13
1st Lt. C. H. Gallagher
Died at Mixcoac, Sep. 10
1st Lt. George B. Hall
1st Lt. James Miller
1st Lt. J. S. McCabe
Wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. Thomas W. Sweeny
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. Charles D. Potter
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. Jacob Griffin
2nd Lt. Addison Farnsworth
2nd Lt. Mayne Reid
Wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. C. B. Brower
2nd Lt. Charles S. Cooper
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. J. W. Henry
2nd Lt. E. Chandler
Mortally wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20, died Aug. 21
2nd Lt. F. G. Boyle
2nd Lt. John Rafferty
2nd Lt. David Scannel
2nd Lt. J. W. Greenel
2nd Lt. Malahowsky
Resigned
2nd Lt. W. H. Browne
Not engaged in any of the actions
2nd Lt. Francis Durning
Resigned
2nd Lt. F. E. Pinto
South Carolina Volunteers
Col. P. M. Butler
Killed at Churubusco, Aug. 20
Lt. Col. J. P. Dickinson
Mortally wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
Maj. A. H. Gladden
Wounded at the Belén Gate, Sep. 13
Capt. F. Sumter
Capt. R.G.M. Dunovant
Capt. K. S. Moffat
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
Capt. J. F. Marshall
Capt. W. Blanding
Capt. W. D. Desaussure
Capt. N. J. Walker
Capt. J. F. Williams
Capt. James D. Blanding
Adj. James Cantey
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
1st Lt. William B. Stanley
1st Lt. C.S. Mellet
1st Lt. J. F. Walker
1st Lt. W. C. Moragne
1st Lt. J. B. Moragne
Killed at Belén Gate, Sep. 13
1st Lt. A. Manegault
1st Lt. J. R. Clark
Mortally wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
1st Lt. A. B. O’Bannon
1st Lt. C. P. Pope
Accidentally wounded, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. T. M. Baker
2nd Lt. S. Sumter
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. W. B. Lilley
2nd Lt. B.W.D. Culp
2nd Lt. James W. Cantey
Killed at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. K. G. Billings
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. Joseph Abney
Wounded at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. David Adams
Killed at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. L. F. Robertson
2nd Lt. Ralph Bell
2nd Lt. J. R. Davis
2nd Lt. J. N. Moye
Wounded at Belén Gate, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. J. W. Steen
>
Wounded at Chapultepec, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. M. R. Clark
2nd Lt. Charles Kirkland
2nd Lt. W. R. Williams
Killed at Churubusco, Aug. 20
2nd Lt. J. W. Stewart
Wounded at Belén Gate, Sep. 13
2nd Lt. F. W. Selleck
Died in the City of Mexico, Oct. 3
2nd Pennsylvania Volunteers
Col. W. B. Roberts
Commanding Regiment
Lt. Col. John W. Geary
Maj. William Brindle
Capt. Thomas S. Loeser
Capt. John Humphries
Capt. Clarence H. Frick
Capt. C. Naylor
Capt. E. C. Williams
Capt. Robert Porter
Capt. James Murray
Capt. James Miller
Wounded
Capt. S. M. Taylor
Capt. James Caldwell
Wounded, died in September
Adj. J. S. Waterbury
R.Q.M., E.E.L. Clare
A.C.S., John G. Geven
1st Lt. Hiram Wolf
1st Lt. Alex McKamey
1st Lt. William Wonders
Died at Mixcoac, Sep. 11
Lt. H.A.M. Filbert
Lt. Richard McMichael
Appointed Lieutenant, Sep. 9
Lt. Samuell Black
Lt. Charles H. Heyer
Lt. James Armstrong
Lt. James Coulter
Wounded
Lt. Isaac Hare
Lt. A. L. Tourison
Lt. D. J. Unger
Lt. H. A. Hambright
Lt. William Rankin
Lt. James Kane
Lt. Wm. P. Skelly
Lt. L. W. Smith
Lt. D. N. Hoffins
Lt. J. Keeffe
Wounded
2nd Lt. John A. Doyle
2nd Lt. Charles Bowers
On duty as Assistant Surgeon
SOURCE: Compiled from a booklet by Henry L. Scott entitled List of Officers Who Marched with the Army under the Command of Major General Winfield Scott, from Puebla upon the City of Mexico (Mexico: American Star Print, 1848). Copy in Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Va.
Appendix 3
The following men who served in Winfield Scott’s army in Mexico later served as generals during the Civil War. This is not intended to be a comprehensive list.
Northern generals—Robert Allen, Lewis G. Arnold, Robert Anderson, Joseph K. Barnes, John M. Brannan, William Brooks, Robert Buchanan, Don Carlos Buell, George Cadwalader, Edward Canby, Silas Casey, Napoleon Jackson Tecumseh Dana, Frederick T. Dent, Gustavus Adolphus DeRussy, John Gray Foster, William French, John W. Geary, George W. Getty, Alfred Gibbs, Charles Gilbert, George H. Gordon, Lawrance Graham, Gordon Granger, Ulysses S. Grant, Charles S. Hamilton, Schuyler Hamilton, Winfield Scott Hancock, William S. Harney, Joseph A. Haskin, John Porter Hatch, William Hays, Charles Heckman, Ethan Allen Hitchcock, Joseph Hooker, Henry J. Hunt, Henry M. Judah, Philip Kearny, Michael K. Lawler, Nathaniel Lyon, Jasper A. Maltby, George McClellan, Justus McKinstry, William R. Montgomery, George W. Morgan, James Scott Negley, William Nelson, Innis N. Palmer, Robert Patterson, Gabriel René Paul, John J. Peck, John W. Phelps, Thomas G. Pitcher, Andrew Porter, Fitz John Porter, Henry Prince, Jesse Lee Reno, Israel Richardson, Benjamin S. Roberts, David A. Russell, John Sedgwick, Truman Seymour, James Shields, Charles Smith, Frederick Steele, Isaac Ingalls Stevens, Charles P. Stone, Edwin V. Sumner, Thomas W. Sweeny, George Sykes, Joseph G. Totten, Zealous B. Tower, Stewart Van Vliet, Thomas Welsh, Henry Wessells, Seth Williams, Thomas Williams, George Wright (78).
Southern generals—James J. Archer, Lewis Armistead, P. G. T. Beauregard, Barnard Bee, Milledge L. Bonham, Simon B. Buckner, James Cantey, Benjamin F. Cheatham, George B. Crittenden, Arnold Elzey, Richard S. Ewell, Daniel Frost, Birkett Fry, Franklin Gardner, William Gardner, John B. Grayson, William Hardee, James Hawes, Daniel Harvey Hill, Paul O. Hebert, Benjamin Huger, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson, Edward Johnson, Joseph E. Johnston, Davis R. Jones, Robert E. Lee, James Longstreet, William W. Loring, Mansfield Lovell, William W. Mackall, John Magruder, George Maney, Arthur M. Manigault, James Martin, Dabney Maury, Samuel B. Maxey, John P. McCown, Abraham C. Myers, John Pemberton, George Pickett, Gideon Pillow, Roswell Ripley, Daniel Ruggles, Henry H. Sibley, James E. Slaughter, Edmund Kirby Smith, Gustavus W. Smith, William Duncan Smith, William Steele, Alexander Steen, David E. Twiggs, Earl Van Dorn, John G. Walker, William Walker, Henry C. Wayne, Cadmus M. Wilcox, John H. Winder (57).
SOURCE: Compiled primarily from Ezra J. Warner, Generals in Blue: Lives of the Union Commanders (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1964); Warner, Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959); Henry L. Scott, List of Officers Who Marched with the Army under the Command of Major General Winfield Scott (1848), copy at Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Va.; and Cadmus M. Wilcox, History of the Mexican War (Washington: Church News, 1892), appx. C.
Appendix 4
Winfield Scott’s General Orders, No. 20, of February 19, 1847, declaring MARTIAL LAW.
1. It is still to be apprehended that many grave offences, not provided for in the Act of Congress “establishing rules and articles for the government of the armies of the United States,” approved April 10, 1806, may again be committed-by, or upon, individuals of those armies, in Mexico, pending the existing war between the two Republics. Allusion is here made to offences, any one of which, if committed within the United States or their organized Territories, would, of course, be tried and severely punished by the ordinary or civil courts of the land.
2. Assassination, murder, poisoning, rape, or the attempt to commit either; malicious stabbing or maiming; malicious assault and battery, robbery, theft; the wanton desecration of churches, cemeteries or other religious edifices and fixtures; the interruption of religious ceremonies, and the destruction, except by order of a superior officer, of public or private property; are such offences.
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