debwallsmith
Corporal
- Joined
- Nov 3, 2021
I'm interested in how the Union army accounted for the missing/dead after a battle? Was there a process that was used? How were the dead identified? Are there publications on this topic?
Must have a sinking feeling when you get down to five or six in a company. A very lonely place if the only one left.It started at the company level. The company 1st Sergeant AKA Orderly Sergeant was responsible for conducting roll calls of their company and filling out a daily roster report called a "morning report" to send up the chain of command.
What makes you think things have changed any. Battlefield aren't an organized place. Things weren't always easy in Vietnam. I ran missions to extract the dead from crashed aircraft. Sometimes it was impossible to extract the corpse's because of the crash itself or enemy fire, sometimes they were totally unrecognizable so we had orders to remove portions of the body for identification purposes. You never forget the smell of burnt human flesh.Must have a sinking feeling when you get down to five or six in a company. A very lonely place if the only one left.
I would never disrespect any veteran, nor was I in that statement. I've been around people who were in WW1, my grandfather was Merchant Marine in WW2, sunk twice, nearly killed by machine gun the second time in the Pacific. The I-27 was the boat that got them, I believe.What makes you think things have changed any. Battlefield aren't an organized place. Things weren't always easy in Vietnam. I ran missions to extract the dead from crashed aircraft. Sometimes it was impossible to extract the corpse's because of the crash itself or enemy fire, sometimes they were totally unrecognizable so we had orders to remove portions of the body for identification purposes. You never forget the smell of burnt human flesh.
Not an enviable job sometimes but had to be done pretty much daily, even in camp. Your numbers would constantly be changing, not just battle losses but you'd be losing guys to disease, injuries, guys out sick, guys on furlough, AWOL, guys being picked for detached duties such as guard duties, help at hospitals and such. And you have guys coming back in, returning wounded, replacements. It was always changing and needing accounting for.Must have a sinking feeling when you get down to five or six in a company. A very lonely place if the only one left.
That is what is confusing with Confederate Service Records. One muster roll will report them AWOL and then next report them at a Hospital. There are many examples where soldiers area listed as: Absent, AWOL. So many that, I tend to disregard that if the soldier appears on a later roll call.Based on answers so far, it appears that men could be reported as KIA when, in fact, they were taken prisoner.
This is not an answer, but it IS relevant as an examplt. Edward Porter Alexander, in his book, "Fighting for the Confederacy," tells of a situation during the battle of Chancellorsville, where in early evening he came across a Union Soldier lying by the roadside crying out loudly, "Water, Water, Water!" Alexander went to him and noticed the Union Soldier had been shot in the forehead and his brain was protruding. Alexander asked what state the Union soldier was from, and the soldier began shouting "New York, New York, New York," incessantly, as long as Alexander could hear as he rode away.I'm interested in how the Union army accounted for the missing/dead after a battle? Was there a process that was used? How were the dead identified? Are there publications on this topic?
Not being at roll call afterward.I'm sure there's someone who can answer this better than me, but I believe a Union soldier was marked as missing if they failed to show for muster after the battle—dead only if their body was found. I'm not sure what process was used, but both armies scoured the field for wounded and dead both during and after the battle. The Union Army did not retroactively mark the mortally wounded as having been killed.
Not really. The NCOs knew the men, the officers generally didn't. The officers mess would list the missing officers.Further complicating issues were if many of the officers were killed in the same engagement.
I'm not so sure. At least given some of my regimental research.Not really. The NCOs knew the men, the officers generally didn't. The officers mess would list the missing officers.
It's a little bit simpler even than that…For infantry at least back then, unless you enlisted in a unit raised in an urban area or in the regular army, you most likely knew, or knew of, many of the guys in your own company. By midway through the war for many units you're talking about 30-40 guys that you spend every day with, line up next to at every roll call, meal, mail call, etc. These guys were brothers in arms in the truest sense of the word.So, clearing the battlefield. Did the soldiers have ID on them? Something like a disk or a paybook? If not, it would have been a dire job trying to identify those killed. It would have had to be the corporals and the sergeants job to identify them - they knew their guys. Many would have been disfigured. Clearing the injured would have been just as bad for the bandsmen - acting as stretcherbearers. i suspect most would have been beyond help, barely alive after losing so much blood and so long after the 'victory'. The dead were left until the next day. I suspect there was little identification of dead after a battle.
Then you have the enemy dead. There was no Geneva Convention about them, especially in a civil war of any nation. Weapons would have been collected and stored - especially if they were better than the ones you had, but I suspect that was about it. There will have been some 'looting' - searching the bodies for valubles. Then dig some deep holes - they had to be deep since wild hogs LOVE an easy meal - or find some old trenches. It was often the local civilians who did that - often against their will if the army was still there. More often, the army moved on leaving the civvies to clear up.
Even dead bodies have their uses. Apparently after Waterloo (1815), the dead were buried in mass graves, but recent excavations have not found many complete skeletons. The current theory is that the locals dug up the bones and ground them to be processed for fertilizer!
Try: https://www.britannica.com/video/195083/Overview-engagements-Battle-of-Gettysburg-American-Civil
Amen Brother. Welcome home!What makes you think things have changed any. Battlefield aren't an organized place. Things weren't always easy in Vietnam. I ran missions to extract the dead from crashed aircraft. Sometimes it was impossible to extract the corpse's because of the crash itself or enemy fire, sometimes they were totally unrecognizable so we had orders to remove portions of the body for identification purposes. You never forget the smell of burnt human flesh.
And what if they were all killed or wounded? A company would be about 50 men - 'about' because they did not always operate at thet strength. Disease and injuries would always remove a few, sometimes a lot. What you said would apply to a unit before their first action - after that, they would be moved around, added to to bring it up to strength.It's a little bit simpler even than that…For infantry at least back then, unless you enlisted in a unit raised in an urban area or in the regular army, you most likely knew, or knew of, many of the guys in your own company. By midway through the war for many units you're talking about 30-40 guys that you spend every day with, line up next to at every roll call, meal, mail call, etc. These guys were brothers in arms in the truest sense of the word.