Browsing named entities in General Horace Porter, Campaigning with Grant. You can also browse the collection for A. H. Terry or search for A. H. Terry in all documents.

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General Horace Porter, Campaigning with Grant, Chapter 24 (search)
case another expedition should be sent, General A. H. Terry would be, for many reasons, the best of General Grant had seldom come in contact with Terry personally, but had been much pleased at the mes River. A suggestion, too, was made that as Terry was a volunteer officer, and as the first expeto listen with interest to what was said about Terry, particularly as to his experience in seacoast and that he was to sail under sealed orders. Terry felt much complimented that he should be singlion that he was to join Sherman. On January 5 Terry was ready to proceed to Fort Monroe, and Grantnce from City Point, the general sat down with Terry in the after-cabin of the steamer, and there m on January 13, and on the morning of the 14th Terry had fortified a position about two miles from t 600 of the garrison were killed or wounded. Terry's loss was 110 killed, 536 wounded, and 13 mis General Grant with additional instructions to Terry; and upon my arrival I could not help being su[3 more...]
General Horace Porter, Campaigning with Grant, Chapter 28 (search)
rning. We have but a few hours of daylight left us. My cavalry are rapidly exhausting their ammunition, and if the attack is delayed much longer they may have none left. And then another batch of staff-officers was sent out to gallop through the mud and hurry up the columns. At four o'clock the formation was completed, the order for the assault was given, and the struggle for Pickett's intrenched line began. The Confederate infantry brigades were posted from left to right as follows: Terry, Corse, Steuart, Ransom, and Wallace. General Fitzhugh Lee, commanding the cavalry, had placed W. H. F. Lee's two brigades on the right of the line, Munford's division on the left, and Rosser's in rear of Hatcher's Run, to guard the trains. I rode to the front, in company with Sheridan and Warren, with the head of Ayres's division, which was on the left. Ayres threw out a skirmish-line and advanced across an open field which sloped down gradually toward the dense woods just north of the W