Revolutionary War, 1775 - 1783
Naval War with France (Undeclared), 1798 - 1801
War with the Barbary Pirates, 1801 - 1805 and 1815
War of 1812, 1812 - 1815
Mexican War, 1846 - 1848
Civil War, 1861 - 1865
Spanish-American War, 1898
China Relief Expedition, 1900 - 1901
Pacification of Nicaragua, 1912 - 1913
Unites States Interventions in Mexico, 1914 - 1917
Pacification of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, 1915 - 1918
World War I, 1917 -1918
World War II, 1941 -1945
Korean Conflict, 1950 -1953
Vietnam War, 1964 -1973
Lebanon Peacekeeping Mission, 1982 - 1984
Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, 1990 - 1991
American Prisoners of War (20th Century)
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In Memoriam
Between the War for Independence and Operation Iraqi Freedom, the armed
forces of the United States have participated in twenty-one principal wars and in numerous
smaller conflicts and operations. In each of these American men and women have paid a high
price for the nation's freedom, selflessly sacrificing life or limb for an honorable cause.
Principal sources of information for the figures, explanatory text and
illustrations appearing below include the National Archives and Records Administration; U.S.
Navy Historical Center; Department of Defense; Department of Veterans Affairs; and The Oxford
Companion to American Military History, from which all quotations are taken.
Civil War, 1861 - 1865
Considered by many historians to be an "irrepressible conflict," the Civil War
erupted as a result of a number of complex, divisive issues that had gone unresolved since the
time of the "incomplete American Revolution of 1776." Prominent among the factors
that shattered the nation were sharp political, social and economic differences between the
northern and southern states, the most pressing of which was the expansion of slavery into
the western territories. Abraham Lincoln was elected to the presidency in 1860 with no support
in the South. Lincoln and his administration had promised to work to harness federal power to
prohibit the expansion of slavery as well as promoting the free-labor economy of the North
"through protective tariffs, subsidies for railroads and free homesteads in the West."
Many southerners saw in the Republican platform a direct threat to their cherished way of life.
Within weeks of the election, but long before the Republican administration took office, seven
southern states seceded from the Union. In April 1861, Lincoln ordered an expedition to relieve
the federal garrison at Fort Sumpter, South Carolina, at which point Confederate authorities
ordered an attack on the fort. When Lincoln called for 75,000 state militia to put down the
"insurrection, "" four more states seceded. These were the opening moves in a war
that would claim more than 600,000 American lives before it ended in the spring of 1865--a war
in which "brother fought brother" until the bitter end. With the sectional conflict
finally settled, "the United States was free to complete the task of conquering the
continent and move toward realizing its destiny as one of the great nations of the world."
Union Casualties in the Civil War 1861 - 1865
| Branch of Service |
Number Serving |
Killed in Action |
Other Deaths |
Non-mortal Wounds |
| Army |
2,128,948 |
138,514 |
221,374 |
280,040 |
| Navy |
|
2,112 |
2,411 |
1,710 |
| Marines |
84,415 |
148 |
312 |
131 |
| Total |
2,213,363 |
140,414 |
224,097 |
281,881 |
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