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Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899 6 2 Browse Search
Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War. 4 0 Browse Search
Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life 2 0 Browse Search
Rev. James K. Ewer , Company 3, Third Mass. Cav., Roster of the Third Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment in the war for the Union 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 20, 1863., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Your search returned 15 results in 8 document sections:

Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War., Chapter 44: battle of Mobile Bay. (search)
lon; Boatswain, H. Dickinson; Gunner, Wm. Parker. Steamer Princess Royal. Commander, M. B. Woolsey; Lieutenant, C. E. McKay; Acting-Assistant Surgeon, T. K. Chandler; Acting-Assistant Paymaster, F. T. Morton; Acting-Master, F. J. Grover; Acting-Ensigns, T. H. Paine and F. A. Miller; Acting-Master's Mates, Freeman Langly and W. E. Cannon; Engineers: Acting-First-Assistant, Wm. Huntley; Acting-Second-Assistant. W. H. Thompson; Acting-Third-Assistants, Andrew Redmond, Charles Wolf and Peter Taylor. *steamer Seminole. Commanders, E. Donaldson, at Mobile, and Henry Rolando; Lieutenant, A. T. Mahan; Surgeon, Charles Martin; Paymaster, T. T. Caswell; Acting-Master, C. G. Arthur; Ensign, G. K. Has-well; Acting-Ensigns, F. A. Cook, G. B. Stevenson and F. Kempton; Acting-Master's Mates, D. K. Perkins, J. P. Knowles and John Dennett; Engineers: Acting-First-Assistant, C. B. Babcock; Acting-Second-Assistant, A. R. Calden; Acting-Third-Assistants, Wm. Drinkwater, G. S. Thurston. P. J.
Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War., Chapter 53: operations of the West Gulf Squadron in the latter part of 1864, and in 1865.--joint operations in Mobile Bay by Rear-Admiral Thatcher and General Canby. (search)
B. S. Cooke and W. C. Barrett; Acting-Boatswain, Hallowell Dickinson. Princess Royal--Third-rate. Commander, M. B. Woolsey; Lieutenant, Chas. E. McKay; Acting Assistant Surgeon, T. R. Chandler; Acting-Assistant Paymaster, F. T. Morton; Acting-Ensigns, A. H. Reynolds, T. A. Witham, J. J. Moule and C. K. Porter; Acting-Master's Mates, Wm. E. Cannon and Lewis Johnson; Engineers: Acting-First-Assistant, Wm. Huntley; Second-Assistant, J. E. Fallon; Acting-Third-Assistants, A. J. Redmond, Peter Taylor and Geo. W. Caldwell. Octorara--Third-rate. Lieutenant-Commander, Wm. W. Low; Acting-Volunteer-Lieutenant, Wm. D. Urann; Assistant Surgeon, E. R. Dodge; Acting-Assistant Paymaster, J. H. Pynchon; Acting-Masters, H. S. Young and M. W. McEntee; Acting-Ensigns, Geo. H. Dodge and J. N. Frost; Acting-Master's Mates, Geo. P. Gifford and Geo. W. Adams; Engineers: W. W. Shipman, R. B. Plotts and Joseph Knight. Kickapoo--Fourth-rate. Lieutenant-Commander, M. P. Jones; Acting-Volunteer-
Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life, XV: journeys (search)
o a charming garden party . . . . The company was distinguished—Huxley, Spencer, Galton, my friend and reader Mark Pattison from Oxford, Sir Rutherford Alcock, Walter Crane and his wife and others . . . . Huxley . . . was very cordial . . . . Walter Crane is quite a young man, modest and retiring and has a nice young wife of the same stamp who seemed pleased at hearing how well he was known in America . . . . In the evening went to meet a few Women Suffrage people and Mrs. Livermore at Peter Taylor's M. P.—the author . . . . I saw people there who are quite American in their sympathies—Miss Helen Taylor, Mill's adopted daughter, being most interesting and more French than English in the grace and sweetness of her manners. At the Voltaire Centenary in Paris, Colonel Higginson heard Victor Hugo speak and was much struck with the storm of enthusiasm which greeted him. Another interesting event of this visit to France was a fortunate meeting with Tourguenieff; and he found Louis Bla<
Rev. James K. Ewer , Company 3, Third Mass. Cav., Roster of the Third Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment in the war for the Union, Company B. (search)
len Smith, Lawrence, 18, s; clerk. Aug. 14, 1862. Killed in action Aug. 3, 1863, Jackson, La. James Sterling, Lawrence, 38, m; shoemaker. Aug. 4, 1862. Disch. May 20, 1865. James H. Stevens, Elliott, Me. Cr. Somerset, 21, s; fisherman. April 9, 1864. Deserted Aug. 23, 1865, Fort Kearney, N. T. Hood A. Stone, Lawrence, 18, m; operative. Aug. 9, 1862. Disch. June 6, 1865. Thomas Sullivan, Kerry, Ire. en. Boston, 24, s; laborer. Nov. 14, 1863. M. O. Sept. 28, 1865. Peter Taylor, E. Cambridge, 18, s; waiter. Jan. 22, 1864. M. O. Sept. 28, 1865. Alic Terrio, Lawrence, 25, m; painter. Aug. 16, 1862. Trans. V. R. C. March 19, 1864. M. O. Aug. 3, 1865. Richard Thomas, Lawrence, 43, m; operative. Aug. 18, 1862. Trans. Co. K, 14th Regt. V. R.C., March 1, 1864. Disch. June 28, 1865, Francis Tovary, Lowell, 45, s; machinist. Aug. 11, 1862. Disch. May 20, 1864. Hiram Tucker, Providence, R. I. Cr. Norton. 19, s; seaman. Dec. 12, 1863. Wounded Sept.
Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899, Chapter 12: the Church of the Disciples: in war time (search)
overnor pressed the gun to his lips before giving it into the keeping of the official guardian of such treasures. This scene was caricatured in one of the public prints of the time. I remember it as most impressive. The governor was an earnest Unitarian, and as already said a charter member of the Church of the Disciples. His religious sympathies, however, outwent all sectarian limits. He prized and upheld the truly devout spirits, wherever found, and delighted in the Methodism of Father Taylor. He used to say, When I want to enjoy a good warm time, I go to Brother Grimes's colored church. Although himself a Protestant of the Protestants, he entertained a sincere esteem for individuals among the Catholic clergy. Among these I remember Father Finotti as one of whom he often spoke, and who was sometimes a guest at his table. When Madame Ristori made her first visit to this country, Father Finotti entertained her one day at dinner, inviting also Governor and Mrs. Andrew. T
Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899, Chapter 15: a woman's peace crusade (search)
n winds are raging o'er the upper ocean, and I am glad to remember that I did read it as advised. My work in London brought me in contact with a number of prominent workers in various departments of public service My acquaintance with Miss Frances Power Cobbe was pleasantly renewed, and I remember attending an afternoon reception at her house, at which a number of literary notabilities were present, among them the brilliant historian, Mr. Froude. I had the pleasure also of meeting Mrs. Peter Taylor, founder of a college for working women; she and her husband had been very friendly to the Northern side during the civil war. An important movement had been set on foot just at this time by Mrs. Grey and her sister, Miss Sherret. This was the institution of schools for girls of the middle class, whose education, up to that time, had usually been conducted at home by a governess. Mrs. Grey encountered a good deal of opposition in carrying out her plans. She invited me to attend a
Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899, Index (search)
Swedenborg, Emanuel, his Divine Love and Wisdom, 204; his theory of the divine man, 208; works read, 209. Sylphide, La, 135. Taddei, Rosa, 130. Taglioni, Madame, danseuse, 135. Task, The, William Cowper's, 58. Tasso, 176, 206. Taylor, Father (Edward T.), Boston Methodist city missionary, 263. Taylor, Mrs., Peter, founds a college for working women, 333. Terry, Luther, an artist in Rome, 127; married to Mrs. Crawford, 312. Terry, Mrs., Luther, See Ward, Louisa. ThaTaylor, Mrs., Peter, founds a college for working women, 333. Terry, Luther, an artist in Rome, 127; married to Mrs. Crawford, 312. Terry, Mrs., Luther, See Ward, Louisa. Thackeray, William M., his admiration for Mrs. Frank Hampton, 234; depicts her in Ethel Newcome, 235. Theatre, the, frowned down in New York, 15, 16. Thoreau, Henry D., Emerson's paper on, 290. Ticknor, Miss, Anna, in the Town and Country Club, 407. Ticknor, George, letter of introduction from, to Miss Edgeworth, 113; to Wordsworth, 115. Tolstoi, Count, Lyeff, his Kreutzer Sonata disapproved of, 17. Torlonia, a Roman banker, anecdote of, 27; ball given by, 123. Torlonia's Pala
The Daily Dispatch: April 20, 1863., [Electronic resource], A British opinion of the Confederate President — a contrast. (search)
, a man of moderate views and sober judgment — as as any man could be to the brawling demagogues and rough back woodsmen, who are the hope of the Northern States. Abraham Lincoln would hardly find in England a constituency to send him to Parliament. Seward would rank far below the Brights and O'Connells, would hardly be listened to by the House, and would obtain but a few brief lines from the reporters; and not one of his colleagues would ever be heard of at all, save as Mr. Cox and Mr. Peter Taylor are heard of — to be treated with universal ridicule and contempt. The leaders of the Southern Confederacy are men who would rank high in any country; and Mr. Jefferson Davis, if he had been born a British subject might fairly have aspired to the highest place that a subject can hold. Well might such men as those, and such a nation as that which they worthily represent, revolt from their degrading connection with his vulgar and demoralized Democracy of the North, and refuse to be