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Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for Dodge or search for Dodge in all documents.
Your search returned 2 results in 2 document sections:
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 241 (search)
A secession Dodge.--The Albany Atlas and Argus prints the following:
We do not know how the people of Maine will regard this invasion of their soil; but we do not believe that a British regiment could ever find its way to Canada, if it landed in New-York, and sought to pass through this State.
It is by such pieces of idiotic rant that the Atlas and Argus seeks to aid the rebellion.
Debarred from serving the secession cause directly, it now bends its efforts to doing it indirect service by misinterpreting every act and traducing every measure of the Government.
If, however, the readers of that journal can be influenced by any such pitiful stuff as this, it simply shows they are as much of fools as it is assumed they were when the writer ventured to pen such nonsense.
New-York Times, January 15.
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Poetry and Incidents., Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore), chapter 337 (search)
How the battle of Pea-Ridge was won.--A private letter from the West contains the following interesting paragraph:
The battle of Pea-Ridge was the best fighting during the war. It was not generalship but soldiership that won it. At the close of the second day all the leading officers except Sigel and Dodge were disheartened, and regarded a surrender as a foregone conclusion.
But the men had just got up to the right pitch, and, around the camp-fires on that weary night, they did not have the faintest idea of being whipped, but universally said: To-morrow we will finish up this business and whip these fellows out. So they did, through clear Northern pluck, and nothing else.
Boston Transcript, April 12.