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Your search returned 443 results in 166 document sections:
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Seacoast defences of South Carolina and Georgia . (search)
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Report of Colonel D. T. Chandler , (search)
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The treatment of prisoners during the war between the States . (search)
Colonel William Preston Johnston, The Life of General Albert Sidney Johnston : His Service in the Armies of the United States, the Republic of Texas, and the Confederate States., Chapter 2 : early army-life. (search)
Fitzhugh Lee, General Lee, Chapter 7 : Atlantic coast defenses.-assigned to duty in Richmond as commander in chief under the direction of the Southern President . (search)
Ulysses S. Grant, Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, The military situation-plans for the campaign-sheridan assigned to command of the cavalry-flank movements-forrest at Fort Pillow -General Banks 's expedition-colonel Mosby -an incident of the Wilderness campaign (search)
J. B. Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary, chapter 37 (search)
Judith White McGuire, Diary of a southern refugee during the war, by a lady of Virginia, 1862 . (search)
John G. Nicolay, A Short Life of Abraham Lincoln, condensed from Nicolay and Hayes' Abraham Lincoln: A History, Chapter 20 . (search)
Chapter 20.
The blockade
Hatteras Inlet
Roanoke Island
Fort Pulaski
Merrimac and Monitor
the Cumberland sunk-
the Congress burned
battle of the ironclads
flag
officer Farragut
forts Jackson and St. Philip
New Orleans captured
Farragut at Vicksburg
Farragut's second expedition to Vicksburg
return to New Orleans
In addition to its heavy work of maintaining the Atlantic blockade, the navy of the United States contributed signally toward the suppression of the radual occupation of the North Carolina coast was going on, two other expeditions of a similar nature were making steady progress.
One of them, under the direction of General Quincy A. Gillmore, carried on a remarkable siege operation against Fort Pulaski, standing on an isolated sea marsh at the mouth of the Savannah River.
Here not only the difficulties of approach, but the apparently insurmountable obstacle of making the soft, unctuous mud sustain heavy batteries, was overcome, and the fort
John G. Nicolay, The Outbreak of Rebellion, Index. (search)