hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 444 results in 57 document sections:

2d Kan. Infantry, May 14, 1861. Mustered out, Oct. 31, 1861. First Lieutenant, Adjutant, 2d Kan. Cavalry, Nov. 11, 1861. Captain and Assistant Adj. General, U. S. Volunteers, Oct. 29, 1862. Mustered out, Dec. 19, 1865. Pratt, William. Born in Massachusetts. Captain, 24th Mass. Infantry, Sept. 2, 1861. Discharged, June 26, 1863. Captain, Assistant Adj. General, U. S. Volunteers, June 26, 1863. Resigned, Apr. 2, 1864. Prescott, George Lincoln. See General Officers. Prescott, William H. Born in Massachusetts. Second Lieutenant, 2d N. H. Infantry, June 5 to Aug. 7, 1861. Captain, 16th U. S. Infantry, Aug. 5, 1861. Resigned, Oct. 15, 1864. Prince, James P. Born in England. First Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon, 22d Mass. Infantry, Oct. 1, 1861. Major, Surgeon, 36th Mass. Infantry, Aug. 13, 1862. First Lieutenant, Assistant Surgeon, U. S. Volunteers, Dec. 27, 1864. Major, Surgeon, May 3, 1865. Brevet Lieut. Colonel, U. S. Volunteers, Jan. 16, 1866. Mustered
Born at Plainfield, Mass., Dec. 27, 1825. First Lieutenant, Regimental Quartermaster 18th Mich. Infantry, Aug. 2, 1862. Captain, Assistant Quartermaster, U. S. Volunteers, Feb. 19, 1863. See U. S. Army. Pratt, John. Born at Boston, Mass., Aug. 23, 1839. Sergeant Major, 2d Kan. Infantry, May 14, 1861. Mustered out, Oct. 31, 1861. First Lieutenant, Adjutant, 2d Kan. Cavalry, Nov. 11, 1861. Captain and Assistant Adj. General, U. S. Volunteers, Oct. 29, 1862. See U. S. Army. Prescott, William H. Born in Massachusetts. Second Lieutenant, 2d N. H. Infantry, June 5, 1861, to Aug. 7, 1861. Captain, 16th U. S. Infantry, Aug. 5, 1861. See U. S. Army. Radetski, Gustave H. Born in Russia. Private and Sergeant, 3d Mass. Cavalry, June 15 to Oct. 15, 1861. Second Lieutenant, 2d Tex. Cavalry, Dec. 8, 1862. First Lieutenant, Dec. 7, 1863. Transferred to 1st Tex. Cavalry, Sept. 10, 1864. Captain, Sept. 26, 1864. Mustered out, Oct. 31, 1865. Second Lieutenant, 28th U. S. Infa
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, Index of names of persons. (search)
77 Pratt, John A., 336 Pratt, M. C., 336 Pratt, Nicholas, 118 Pratt, Wheelock, 225 Pratt, William, 336, 439 Pray, C. F., 336 Pray, J. H., 118 Pray, R. B., 118, 336 Pray, T. J., 118 Pray, W. W., 336 Pray, William, 336, 494 Preble, G. H., 704 Prentiss, W. M., 118 Prescott, Albert, 225 Prescott, C. B., 336 Prescott, D. M., 336 Prescott, F. O., 336 Prescott, G. B., 704 Prescott, G. H., 337 Prescott, G. L., 192, 225, 439, 550 Prescott, Morrill, 337 Prescott, W. A., 118 Prescott, W. H., 439, 477 Prest, Ebenezer, 118 Preston, D. J., 337, 494 Preston, S. W., 704 Preston, W. H., 337 Price, B. S., 118 Prickett, Jesse, 337 Priest, G. E., 337 Priest, J. D., 337 Prime, S. S., 337 Prince, Albert, 337 Prince, J. B., Jr., 337 Prince, J. P., 387, 439, 550 Prince, J. T., Jr., 337 Prince, W. E., 439, 550 Prior, G. S., 118 Proctor, A. E., 337 Proctor, A. N., 337 Proctor, G. A., 337 Proctor, G. B., 494 Proctor, J. L., 439, 550 Proctor, Oliver, 576 Proctor,
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 12: voices of the night (search)
of to-day could record in his note-books an equally continuous course of mild festivities. There are weeks when he never spends an evening at home. He often describes himself as gloomy, but the gloom is never long visible. He constantly walks in and out of Boston, or drives to Brookline or Jamaica Plain; and whist and little suppers are never long omitted. Lowell was not as yet promoted to his friendship because of youth, nor had he and Holmes then been especially brought together, but Prescott, Sumner, Felton, and others constantly appear. He draws the line at a fancy ball, declining to costume himself for that purpose; and he writes that he never dances, but in other respects spends his evenings after his own inclination. Two years later, however, he mentions his purpose of going to a subscription ball for the purpose of dancing with elderly ladies, who are, he thinks, much more grateful for slight attentions than younger ones. It is curious to find the fact made prominent
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Chapter 13: third visit to Europe (search)
fizer's Junggesell. A scrap of newspaper, bearing the seal of the State of New York with the motto Excelsior, suggested the poem of that name. The Skeleton in Armor was included within the book and was originally to have given the title to it. Prescott, the historian, said that this poem and the Hesperus were the best imaginative poems since Coleridge's Ancient Mariner. Reading the tenth chapter of Mark in Greek, Longfellow thought of Blind Bartimeus. He wrote to his father that he liked thming poem about The Flowers' Revenge (Der Blumen Rache ). He just missed seeing Uhland, the only German poet then more popular than Freiligrath; he visited camps of 50,000 troops and another camp of naturalists at Mayence. Meantime, he heard from Prescott, Sumner, and Felton at home; the Spanish Student went through the press, and his friend Hawthorne was married. He finally sailed for home on October 22, 1842, and occupied himself on the voyage in writing a small volume of poems on slavery.
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Index (search)
, 172, 189. Portland Academy, 15-17. Portland Gazette, the, 22. Potomac River, 116. Potter, Anne (Storer), 60. Potter, Hon., Barrett, 60, 63; Longfellow's letter to, about his wife's death, 107-111. Potter, Eliza A., 109-111; Longfellow's letter to, 113-115; Longfellow's letter to, announcing his engagement, 172; Frances Appleton's letter to, 174, 175. Potter, Margaret. See Thacher, Mrs. Peter. Potter, Mary Storer. See Longfellow, Mary S. P. Pratt, Dexter, 289. Prescott, William H., 146, 161; on Longfellow's poems, 149. Prothero, Canon, presides at Longfellow commemoration in Westminster Abbey, 249; accepts bust, 255. Pulaski, Casimir, Count, 27. Pulszky, Madame, her White, Red, and Black, cited, 173 note. Pushmataha, 79. Quincy, Edmund, 285. Quincy, Josiah, 122, 178; his letter to Longfellow offering professorship, 84, 85; Longfellow's letters to, 85-87, 155, 157, 158; his letter to Longfellow about absence, 159, 160. Quincy, Mrs., Josiah, 133,
0 to 500,000, and twelve which contain above 500,000. Verdi is composing a new opera entitled the Blind Posoner, the libret to of which is said to be full of horrors. In a single town of Maine, containing only 450 inhabitants, 32 people died last year of consumption. Miss Lizzie Dill, an actress, is a candidate for State Librarian before the Indiana Legislature. Wm. Archer Cocke, of Richmond, Va., lectured in Baltimore on the 22d instant, on the "Life and Writings of Wm. H. Prescott." The Countess of Eglinton died on the 31st ult., very suddenly, at Eglinton Castle, Scotland. To-morrow will be the one hundred and second anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns. All enormous cow, weighing alive 2,650 pound, was slaughtered in Boston last week. The steam-frigate Merrimack, now at Norfolk, will soon be ordered to prepare for sea. The police of Mobile have organized themselves into a military company. M. Romero, the Mexican Minister at Was