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 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 62
Seite 9
... flank , within an hundred yards . The unsuspecting soldiers were riddled with solid shot , can- ister , and rifle - balls . Some tumbled headlong , never to rise again . Those who were uninjured leaped from the cars . There was great ...
... flank , within an hundred yards . The unsuspecting soldiers were riddled with solid shot , can- ister , and rifle - balls . Some tumbled headlong , never to rise again . Those who were uninjured leaped from the cars . There was great ...
Seite 22
... flank of the Rebels . Then came the opening of the cannonade and the increasing roar as regiment after regi- ment fell into line , and moved southward , through the thickets of pine . Sharp and clear above the musketry rose the cheers ...
... flank of the Rebels . Then came the opening of the cannonade and the increasing roar as regiment after regi- ment fell into line , and moved southward , through the thickets of pine . Sharp and clear above the musketry rose the cheers ...
Seite 24
... flank for several hours with terrible effect , but our men flinched not till their numbers had been so diminished by the well - aimed and steady volleys that they were compelled to give way for new regiments . The Seventh and Eighth ...
... flank for several hours with terrible effect , but our men flinched not till their numbers had been so diminished by the well - aimed and steady volleys that they were compelled to give way for new regiments . The Seventh and Eighth ...
Seite 79
... gained McClernand's flank . Buckner , however , who was to strike McClernand's left , was slow in advancing . Had he moved as rapidly as the other divisions , McClernand would 1862. ] 79 THE OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN IN TENNESSEE .
... gained McClernand's flank . Buckner , however , who was to strike McClernand's left , was slow in advancing . Had he moved as rapidly as the other divisions , McClernand would 1862. ] 79 THE OPENING OF THE CAMPAIGN IN TENNESSEE .
Seite 113
... flank , and win the victory . Lee entered Maryland as a liberator , believing that the peo- ple would rise en masse to welcome him ; but he was greatly mistaken . Taking the train from Philadelphia , I went to Harrisburg , Lancaster ...
... flank , and win the victory . Lee entered Maryland as a liberator , believing that the peo- ple would rise en masse to welcome him ; but he was greatly mistaken . Taking the train from Philadelphia , I went to Harrisburg , Lancaster ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Four Years of Fighting: A Volume of Personal Observation with the Army and ... Charles Carleton Coffin Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2018 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. P. Hill advance army artillery attack battle battle of Fredericksburg boats bridge brigade Burnside camp cannon Captain cavalry Chambersburg Chancellorsville church Cold Harbor Colonel column command crossed Culp's Hill division enemy enemy's Falmouth field fight fire flag flank fleet force Ford Fort Pillow fought Fredericksburg front Germanna Gordonsville Grant ground gunboats guns hands head-quarters hill Hooker horses Howard hundred infantry Jackson Kentucky land Lee's Longstreet look lying Maryee's massa McClellan Meade Meade's miles morning moved movement negroes night North o'clock officers opened passed pickets position Potomac prisoners railroad Rappahannock reached rear Rebel batteries regiment Richmond ridge river road rode says Second Corps sent shells shot Sickles side Sixth Corps skirmishers slavery slaves soldiers South Stevensburg Stonewall Jackson stream Taneytown thousand took town troops Union Union army wagons Washington Weehawken woods wounded Yankees