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Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 3 2 0 Browse Search
Edward L. Pierce, Memoir and letters of Charles Sumner: volume 1 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 22, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 3, 1862., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 2 2 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Book and heart: essays on literature and life 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: January 27, 1865., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
William Hepworth Dixon, White Conquest: Volume 2 2 0 Browse Search
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore) 2 0 Browse Search
James Barnes, author of David G. Farragut, Naval Actions of 1812, Yank ee Ships and Yankee Sailors, Commodore Bainbridge , The Blockaders, and other naval and historical works, The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 6: The Navy. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller) 2 0 Browse Search
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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.53 (search)
forwarded to Branch & Sons, Richmond, and secured $Zzz,800 for his bonds. While Colonel Gibbes was in England trying to place the cotton bonds, he was accorded a privilege which few then enjoyed, and from which he now derives an unique distinction. He was in a semi-official capacity permitted to witness the marriage of the Prince of Wales, now King Edward of England. The marriage took place at the chapel of Windsor Castle, and there were few permitted to enter the church, as the Queen, Victoria, was in deep mourning for her husband. However, 200,000 people crowded the streets leading to the chapel. Although it was a private marriage, there was a great deal of style and pomp about the ceremony. The Queen attended and viewed the ceremony from a balcony. Colonel Gibbes saw her as she parted the curtains of the balcony to look down upon the marriage. Colonel Gibbes is, perhaps, the only living American who was invited there. He was then staying with Mr. James M. Mason, Commissio
Jula Ward Howe, Reminiscences: 1819-1899, Index (search)
Turks, their devastation of Greece, 85. Tweedy, Edmund, 402. Tweedy, Mary, 402. Umberto, king of Italy, crowned, 424. Uncle Tom's Cabin, Mrs. Stowe's, 253. United States, Bank of, Jackson's refusal to renew charter of, 50; English sneer at, 17 Van de Weyer, Mr. Sylvain, Belgian minister to England, 93. Van de Weyer, Mrs. Sylvain, 92. Vatican, evening visit to, 129; head of Zeus in, 132. Via Felice, a poem, 200. Victor Emmanuel, his popularity and death, 423. Victoria, Queen, 93. Vienna, the Howes at, 118. Von Walther, Mme., 118. Voysey, Rev., Charles, sermon by, 330. Waddington, W. H., 410. Wade, Benjamin F., commissioner on the annexation of Santo Domingo, 181, 345. Wadsworth, William, of Geneseo, 104. Walcourt, Lord, visited by the Howes, 114, 115. Walcourt, Lady, 115. Wall Street, Samuel Ward in, 51; John Ward in, 55. Wallace, Horace Binney, a delightful companion, 198, 199; sad death, 200; lines to, 200, 201; recommends Comte's
Historic leaves, volume 8, April, 1909 - January, 1910, Address of F. M. Hawes at Memorial service October 31, 1909. (search)
one who, by his enthusiasm and his fuller grasp of subjects, could lead me farther on the road which I had chosen. We all miss his companionship and cheer, and his loss to this Society is irreparable. In selecting from the copious notes supplied me by the family, I may fail to touch upon all the salient features of his life, although even the minutest details have proved interesting to me. A few words in relation to his boyhood. He used to like to tell that he was born the same day Victoria became Queen of England (June 20, 1837). Being an only child for nearly ten years may have tended to make him sober-minded and serious beyond his years. His mother wished him to be a minister, and he was offered a scholarship in Tufts College when he was about twenty, but he declined, as he did not feel that he was fitted for that profession. But some very precocious religious meditations, written at the age of eight, show that, for a time, at least, his mother had very fertile ground to
Underwood, James, 42, 48. Union Flag Unfurled, 52. Union Ladies' Soldiers' Aid Society, 82. Union, Rock County, Wis., 82. Union Square, 7, 8, 12, 15, 17, 19, 74. Union Square Before the War, 62. Union Square and Its Neighborhood About the Year 1846, 62. Unitarian Church, 27. Unitarian Parsonage, 18. United Colonies, 52. Unity, N. H., 44. Upham, John, 49. Upham, William Henry, 49. Urann, Captain, Thomas, 77. Veteran Firemen's Association, 18. Vicksburg, 65. Victoria, 72. Vinal, Alfred E., 14, 18. Vinal Avenue, 6, 14. Vinal, Edward E., 14. Vinal, Emmeline A., 14. Vinal, John W., 14,--18. Vinal, Lucy A., 14. Vinal, Lydia, 14. Vinal, Lydia M., 13, 18. Vinal, Lydia (Stone), 17. Vinal, Margaret F., 14. Vinal, Martha A., 14. Vinal, Mary Elizabeth, 13. Vinal, Quincy Adams, 14, 15, 17, 62 Vinal, Robert, 13, 17. Vinal, Robert Aldersey, 13, 14, 15, 17. Wade, Captain, Jonathan, 53. Wakefield, Mass., 22. Walker, Leonard, 57. Walnut Hill, 1
, 148, 149, 150, 195, 201, 206, 207, 209, 222, 227, 232, 314, 316, 318; VII., 99, 102, 104, 112, 118; Riding the Sawbuck at, VII., 191; provost-marshal guard house at, VII., 191; McPherson Hospital at, VII, 233, 240; U. S. hospital boat Red Rover at, VII., 307; VIII., 29; headquarters signal corps at, VIII., 325; capture of, VIII., 330, 340, 352; colored troops at, IX., 173, 204; cemetery at, IX., 281; surrender of, X., 32; casualties at, X., 34, 156. Victor,, C. S. S., VI., 296. Victoria, Queen of England, Proclamation of Neutrality issued by, VI., 308. Victoria,, C. S. S., VI., 123. Vidette,, U. S. S., I., 356. Viele, E. L., X., 227. Vienna, Va., I., 348. Villard, H., X., 42. Villepigue, J. B., I., 237; X., 256. Vincennes,, U. S. S., VI., 189. Vincent, S., II., 249, 252, 253, 254, X., 137. Vincent's brigade, II., 255. Vindicator,, U. S. S., I., 239; VI., 221; IX., 165. Vinton, D. H., II., 328. Vionville,
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Index (search)
Prof., Daniel, 214. Tripoli, 14. Trumbull, John, 23. Turgenieff, Ivan S., resembled Longfellow in looks, 282. Tyrol, the, 113. Uhland, Johann L., 161, 219; his Das Gluck von Edenhall, mentioned, 149. United States, 116, 240, 250, 251, 255; Sumner elected to Senate of, 186. University Hall, Cambridge, 176. Upsala, University of, 97. Van Winkle, C. S., 69. Vassall, Col., John, 116. Venice, 223, 286. Vere, Aubrey de, 141. Vere, Schele de, 204. Vevey, 241. Victoria, Queen, 118, 221. Virgil, 54,194. Virginia, 81, 271. Vogelwied, Walter von der, 238,287. Voices of the Night, 138, 177, 213, 228, 260; commenced, 137; success of, 141; publication of, 145. Voltaire, Francis M. A. de, 112,120, 121. Wadsworth, Christopher, 12. Wadsworth, Elizabeth B., 12. Wadsworth, Henry, 14. Wadsworth, Miss, Lucia, 97, 99; Mary S. P. Longfellow's letter to, 100-106. Wadsworth, Gen., Peleg, 12, 18; appearance of, 13. Wadsworth, Zilpah. See Longfellow, Zil
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 1., Medford Historical Society. (search)
Wait. Heraldry. Benj. P. Hollis, F. H. C. Woolley, Charles B. Dunham, Dr. J. Edson young, William F. Kingman. Library and Collections. Miss Mary E. Sargent, Miss Agnes W. Lincoln. Walter F. Cushing, Miss Katherine H. Stone, Joseph H. Wheeler, Cleopas B. Johnson, Benj. F. Fenton. Historic Photographs and Portraits. Will C. Eddy, John H. Hooper, Dr. R. J. P. Goodwin. Members. Number previously reported, 192. Alden, Miss E. L. Bissell, Hezekiah. Broderson, N. H. Davis, Miss E. A. Fernald, Mrs. M. T. Fitch, Arthur E. Fitch, Mrs. A. E. Gill, Miss Adeline B. Hatch, George S. Hobbs, Lewis F. Hobbs, Mrs. Victoria B. Litchfield, Parker R. Locke, E. F. Lovering, Frank W. Manning, Leonard J. Parker, Wm. I. Pike, Chester J. Sampson, E. J. Sawyer, Miss Z. Start, Prof. Edwin A. Tay, Mrs. Anna J. Thompson, Abijah. Tufts, James W. Wheeler, Joseph H. Whitmore, Wm. H. Young, Dr. J. Edson.
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 4., Medford Historical Society. (search)
Hall, George S. Hall, Horace D. Hall, Dr. Walter L. Hallowell, Col. N. P. Hallowell, Richard P. Hallowell, Mrs. Anna D. Hallowell, N. Penrose. Harlow, Miss Catherine E. Hatch, Frank E. Hatch, George S. Hatch, Arthur T. Haskins, Mrs. M. J. Hayes, Edward W. Hayes, Mrs. Ellen R. Hayes, Mrs. C. B. Hayes, Miss Martha E. Hedenburg, Dr. James. Herriott, Miss Adelaide S. Hervey, James A. Hinckley, Miss Ella S. Hobbs, Lewis F. Hobbs, Mrs. Victoria B. Hodges, Gilbert. Hogan, Mrs. Mary. Hollis, Benjamin P. Hollis, Mrs. Mary B. Hooper, John H. Hooper, Mrs. John H. Johnson, Cleophas B. Jones, Charles N. Jones, Mrs. Frances W. Jones, Miss Amy W. Joyce, Allston P. Kennedy, Miss Alice J. Kidder, Fred H. Kidder, Mrs. C. Edith. Kingman, William F. Kummer, Charles E. Lane, George H. Langell, Everard I. Law, Colonel Asa. Larkin Charles E. Lawrence, Hon. Samuel C. Lawrence, Mrs
the dust quickening into life. In the same year Mrs. Rowson published by subscription, and under the patronage of her grace, the duchess of Devonshire, then one of the most beautiful and accomplished ladies of England, her first work, entitled Victoria. The work is dedicated to her grace, the duchess of Devonshire, and among the subscribers' names are those of Samuel Adams, General John Burgoyne, Mrs. Sarah Siddons, and other celebrities of that day. On the appearance of Victoria, the duchessVictoria, the duchess introduced her protege to the Prince of Wales, known afterwards as George IV., and who was so well pleased with the young author and her book as to bestow a pension on her father. Writing, now observes Mrs. Rowson, was her most pleasurable amusement; and she gave to the world in rapid succession the following books: Mary, or, The Test of Honor, A Trip to Parnassus, The Inquisitor. Nason says of them these works exhibit alike fertility of imagination, simplicity of style, and purity of heart.
day. The Prince Albert, North American and Kangaroo had arrived safely out. The exciting news from the United States had produced a panic in the Liverpool cotton market, causing it to open at a decline of , but it closed firmer, with more inquiry, which was freely met by holders. The siege of Gaeta still continued. Four heavy batteries had opened fire on the town. The Persia was expected to take out to the United States fully $1,000,000. The Empress Eugenie visited Victoria, at Windsor Castle, on Wednesday. The apprehension of a monetary crisis at Paris had subsided. The Bank of France was largely gaining specie. The Bourse was higher. It is reported that Napoleon has intimated to Francis II. of Naples, the uselessness of further resistance. It is rumored that Cardinal Antonelli has resigned. The Austrian official journal contradicts the rumored negotiations for the cession of Venetia to Italy. Commercial. Liverpool, Dec. 8. --Cott