9000.......Its over 9000!
6
Approximately 360,000 Union troops and 258,000 Confederate troops died during the American Civil War.
It is estimated that around 620,000 soldiers died in the American Civil War. This includes approximately 360,000 Union soldiers and 260,000 Confederate soldiers.
There were approximately 2.2 million Union troops throughout the entirety of the Civil War. Only about half of these were native-born Americans.
The battle was noteworthy as it was one of the few Civil War battles where the Union was outnumbered and the Confederate forces had a 3500 soldiers led by Colonel Stand Watie a Cherokee Indian. The total Rebel force numbered seventeen troops. Union forces numbered eleven thousand.
There is no actual number, only approximations. An approximate number for total deaths on both the Union and Confederate sides is 625,000. Approximately 365,000 of those lost were on the Union side while approximately 260,000 were on the Confederate side.
The Battle of Poison Spring was a Confederate victory. The battle took place in Arkansas on April 18, 1864. Union forces attempting to secure total control of Arkansas were defeated.
Hard to answer, but the total deaths were: Union, 369,000, Confederate, 258,000.
Confederate Forces Killed: 2,592 Wounded: 12,709 Missing: 5,150 Total: 20,451 Union Forces Killed: 3,072 Wounded: 14,477 Missing: 5,434 Total: 22,983 Combined: 43,434 Source: "General Lee", General Fitzhugh Lee, p.302
Union death toll was 360,222; Confederate death toll: 258,000. A total of 613,222 deaths from The Civil War.
The US Civil War Battle of Gettysburg took place on the first three days of July in 1863. The combined total of casualties of the North and the South reached over 50,000 troops. Union General George Meade won the battle over General Lee's Confederate forces.
Estimates for the total number of American deaths from the Civil War vary but generally accepted figures fall between 600,000 and 720,000. '''The Confederate strength in total was estimated to be between 750,000 to 1,250,000. and of those approximately 258,000 men died, 94,000 in battle and 164,000 from disease and infection.'''