Four Years of Fighting: A Volume of Personal Observation with the Army and Navy, from the First Battle of Bull Run to the Fall of RichmondTicknor and Fields, 1866 - 558 Seiten |
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Seite vii
... Bridge . - · CHAPTER IX . INVASION OF KENTUCKY . The Opposing Forces . - Bragg's Advance . - Capture of Frankfort . The Rebels in Lexington . — Inauguration of Governor Harris . - Bragg's Re- treat from Frankfort . - Battle of ...
... Bridge . - · CHAPTER IX . INVASION OF KENTUCKY . The Opposing Forces . - Bragg's Advance . - Capture of Frankfort . The Rebels in Lexington . — Inauguration of Governor Harris . - Bragg's Re- treat from Frankfort . - Battle of ...
Seite x
... Bridge .. A Night in a Cabin . Movement to Hanover.- Battle of Bethesda Church . General Smith's Advance to Cold Harbor . Sheridan's Movement . Position of the two Armies . - - - - - - ---- - First Battle of Cold Harbor . - Hospital ...
... Bridge .. A Night in a Cabin . Movement to Hanover.- Battle of Bethesda Church . General Smith's Advance to Cold Harbor . Sheridan's Movement . Position of the two Armies . - - - - - - ---- - First Battle of Cold Harbor . - Hospital ...
Seite 5
... bridges across the Potomac , had thirty thousand men ; but we now know that his whole force consisted of nine regiments , two battalions of infantry , three hundred cavalry , and sixteen pieces of artillery . It was for the interest of ...
... bridges across the Potomac , had thirty thousand men ; but we now know that his whole force consisted of nine regiments , two battalions of infantry , three hundred cavalry , and sixteen pieces of artillery . It was for the interest of ...
Seite 11
... Bridge , and have the draw taken up . " We promised to do so if possible , and soon came upon the mutineers , who were hastening towards the bridge . They were greatly excited . They were talking loud and boisterously in German . Their ...
... Bridge , and have the draw taken up . " We promised to do so if possible , and soon came upon the mutineers , who were hastening towards the bridge . They were greatly excited . They were talking loud and boisterously in German . Their ...
Seite 12
... bridge , who , at a loss to know what it meant , allowed them to pass unchallenged . Now that we were compelled to follow , there was time to think of contingencies . What if our horses had started ? or what if in the darkness a soldier ...
... bridge , who , at a loss to know what it meant , allowed them to pass unchallenged . Now that we were compelled to follow , there was time to think of contingencies . What if our horses had started ? or what if in the darkness a soldier ...
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A. P. Hill advance army artillery attack battle boats bridge brigade Burnside cannon Captain cavalry Chambersburg Chancellorsville Charleston church Cold Harbor Colonel colored command crossed Culp's Hill D. H. Hill division enemy enemy's field fight fire flag flank force Ford Fort Pillow fought Fredericksburg front Gordonsville Grant ground gunboats guns hands head-quarters hill Hooker horses Howard hundred infantry Jackson Kentucky Lee's Longstreet look lying massa McClellan Meade Meade's miles morning Morris Island moved movement negroes night North o'clock officers passed pickets position Potomac prisoners railroad reached rear Rebel batteries regiment Richmond ridge river road Savannah says Second Corps sent shells Sherman shot Sickles side Sixth Corps slavery slaves soldiers South South Carolina stream Sumter Taneytown thousand tion took town troops Union Union army wagons Washington Weehawken woods wounded Yankees