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        headquarters Twentieth Indiana Battery, Jonesborough, Ga., 
          September
          5, 1864
        .
      
       
        Sir: I have the honor to make the following report of the operations of the Twentieth
          Indiana Battery during this campaign:
       
        On the 
          14th day of August
        , in obedience to your order, tie battery was placed in a position in the works before Atlanta, which had just been vacated by Battery I, First Ohio Artillery, on the right of
        the First Brigade and the left of the Second
          Brigade, First Division, Fourteenth Army Corps.
        We found in our front and in the enemy's works the remnant of a battery which had been dismounted previously by
        Battery I, First Ohio Artillery,
        and which the enemy were endeavoring to remount and place in position near their former one bearing upon us. I
        directed fire to be kept up on all working parties of the enemy in our front, which was done effectually
        until the night of the 
          25th
        , when the enemy, under cover of night, placed a battery obliquely to our right in a new position,
        bearing upon the Twentieth Battery, and on the morning of the 
          26th of August
         directed a sharp fire on our works, when I directed a concentrated fire of the whole battery on the
        enemy's battery, and,
        with the firing from the Seventh Indiana Battery, soon silenced the enemy's
        guns and damaged their works so seriously that their artillery abandoned the position.
        During the firing I expended the following ammunition: 63 spherical case, 129 shell, and 122 solid shot.
        On the evening of the 
          26th of August
        , in obedience to your orders, the battery took up the march with the corps in the general movement on
        this point, and moved
        under your direction until the 
          28th of August
        , when the Twentieth Indiana Battery and the Seventh Indiana Battery were organized into the Third Battalion of
          Artillery, of the Fourteenth Army Corps, by order of the
        major-general commanding the corps, and in obedience to your order reported to 
          Brigadier-General
          Baird
        , commanding the Third Division, Fourteenth Army Corps, to move with and be maneuvered with that division.
        On the morning of the 
          29th of August
        
        
          Brigadier-General
          Baird
         assigned the battalion a position in his column, and we marched with his command during the day without
        any firing by the
        Twentieth Indiana Battery, the Seventh Indiana
          Battery under your direction having fired six rounds from a position on the Atlanta and Montgomery Railroad.
        The battery moved with the Third Division, of the Fourteenth Army Corps, under the direction of 
          Brigadier-General
          Baird
        , commanding, up to the battle-ground on the afternoon of the 
          1st instant
        , when the infantry became engaged, and the Twentieth Indiana Battery,
        with the Seventh Indiana Battery, was, by order of 
          Brigadier-General
          Baird
        , commanding the division, placed in a position in reserve, with orders to await orders in readiness.
        The battery was not engaged, and consequently met with no losses.
        On the 
          2d instant
         the battery arrived at Jonesborough, Ga., its present
        position, with the Third Division, Fourteenth Army Corps.
        When the battery moved from its position on the night of the 
          26th of August
         I was necessarily compelled to leave some property for the reason that all my transportation wagons,
        with a detail of one sergeant and ten men, were by your order out after forage, and I had no means of
        transporting them, the wagons having failed to reach me until noon next day, after the enemy occupied our old
        position.
        The following is a list of the stores lost: 2 mules, unserviceable; 3 sets mule harness; 300 feet picket rope; i
        wall tent.
       
        I take pleasure in reporting the good conduct of officers and men in my command during the campaign.
       
        I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
       
      
Maj. Charles Houghtaling , Chief of Artillery, Fourteenth Army Corps.