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Your search returned 487 results in 221 document sections:
The Atlanta (Georgia) Campaign: May 1 - September 8, 1864., Part I: General Report. (ed. Maj. George B. Davis, Mr. Leslie J. Perry, Mr. Joseph W. Kirkley), chapter 75 (search)
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Chapter XXII: Operations in Kentucky, Tennessee, North Mississippi, North Alabama, and Southwest Virginia. March 4-June 10, 1862. (ed. Lieut. Col. Robert N. Scott), March 16 , 1862 .-action at Pound Gap, Ky. (search)
William F. Fox, Lt. Col. U. S. V., Regimental Losses in the American Civil War, 1861-1865: A Treatise on the extent and nature of the mortuary losses in the Union regiments, with full and exhaustive statistics compiled from the official records on file in the state military bureaus and at Washington, chapter 10 (search)
John M. Schofield, Forty-six years in the Army, Index (search)
A Roster of General Officers , Heads of Departments, Senators, Representatives , Military Organizations, &c., &c., in Confederate Service during the War between the States. (ed. Charles C. Jones, Jr. Late Lieut. Colonel of Artillery, C. S. A.), Brigadier-Generals of the Confederate States Army, alphabetically arranged. (search)
The Daily Dispatch: November 3, 1860., [Electronic resource], English view of the late Royal visit. (search)
Manufacture of falsehoods.
More falsehoods have been invented and circulated during the last four months about South Carolina than have been told about all other subjects for the last twenty-five years. The forced loans, the tax of $16 a head on negroes, the alleged exactions upon Gen Aiken, the turbulent conduct of the volunteers, the suffering from want of food and coal, are but a few specimens of a thousand which have been manufactured out of the whole cloth, and never had the slightest shadow of foundation.
It is humiliating to think that a class of writers exist in this country who earn their subsistence by deliberate slander, an article which they manufacture with no other care or scruple than to make it, like any other fabric, as complete as possible.
Gen, Scott.
--The Norfolk (Va.) Herald states "on pretty good authority," that Lieut. Gen Scott has said that in the event of Virginia seceding, it was his determination to resign his commission in the army, and make Virginia his place of residence for the remainder of his days.
The Daily Dispatch: February 27, 1861., [Electronic resource], The working men's National Convention . (search)
Ruffianism in Washington.
The times are becoming lively in Washington.
Congressman Van Wyck, who was never before known as a first-class combatant, has been assailed by three rogues (in buckram?) and let fly at them more furiously than honestJack. Why don't Gen.Scottkeep better order in the Federal Capital with his standing army police?
Perhaps some of his heroes were the perpetrators of the deed.
Letters from Washington have appeared in the columns of our city contemporaries stating that citizens have been stabbed and ladies insulted by these myrmidons.