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ed no country, and general visiting might have brought about unpleasant contretemps. The Northern people were then, as now, the most numerous class of travellers; to them might be applied the commentary on the Scotch, Had Cain been a Scot, God had altered his doom, not forced him to wander but kept him at home. It was quiet we sought, and I found it at Llandudno, and Mr. Davis accepted an invitation from Lord Shrewsbury to visit him at Alton Towers, while with our dear friends the Norman Walkers and the Westfeldts, I remained in Wales. The quiet of my outing was broken by my little William being very ill with typhoid fever at Waterloo, where he and his brother were at school, and then I learned to love the English people and acquired a sense of home among them. Every kindness that good hearts and sound heads could devise was showered upon us during our long and dreary period of nursing and hopelessness. It is not too late to express sincere gratitude, for we never forgot to b
J. William Jones, Christ in the camp, or religion in Lee's army, Roster of chaplains, army of Northern Virginia. (search)
Heth's Division—Continued. Fifty-second North Carolina. Rev. Mr. Sanford; J. M. Cline. Cook's Brigade. Fifteenth North Carolina. S. W. Howerton. Twenty-seventh North Carolina. Forty-sixth North Carolina. A. D. Cohen. Forty-eighth North Carolina. C. Plyler. Davis's Brigade. Second Mississippi. Eleventh Mississippi. Forty-second Mississippi. T. D. Witherspoon. Fifty-fifth North Carolina. Twenty-sixth Mississippi. M. B. Chapman. First Battalion. Archer's (Old) Brigade and Walkers (Old) Brigade. First Tennessee. W. T. Helm. Seventh Tennessee. Rev. Mr. Harris. Fourteenth Tennessee. J. E. King. Forty-fourth Tennessee. Twenty-third Tennessee. Sixty-third Tennessee. Fortieth Virginia. Geo. F. Bagby; J. M. Anderson. Forty-seventh Virginia. S. P. Meredith; S. B. Barber. Fifty-fifth Virginia. R. B. Beadles. Twenty-second Virginia Battalion. Thirteenth Alabama. T. H. Howell. Wilcox's Division. Scales's Brigade. Thirteenth North Carolina. Sixteenth Nort
Waitt, Ernest Linden, History of the Nineteenth regiment, Massachusetts volunteer infantry , 1861-1865, Chapter 27: the Gettysburg Campaign. (search)
soldiers food and water. The sun sank below the horizon, evening breezes took the place of his hot breath, bushes by the wayside grew shadowy and finally faded into dark, irregular masses, taking on fantastic and wierd forms as the night settled over the land. The stars came out one by one in a moonless sky, but still there was the incessant tramp, tramp, tramp as the line moved forward without a halt. The Second Corps, as the result of this forced march was nicknamed Hancock's Night-Walkers. In silence and with aching bones, they struggled along until nine o'clock that evening when they halted in the streets of Uniontown, 32 miles from Monocacy Junction from whence they had started in the morning. The men dropped where they halted and instantly were asleep. None of the companies had full ranks and stragglers from all of them came gradually in during the night. The regimental return made out at Uniontown reads as follows: Col. Devereux, promoted from Lieutenant Colonel
.............. 323, 329 Halleck, Major General,..............................114, 115 Ham, George B.,...................................................... 249 Ham, George P., ...................................................... 262 Hamilton, William, ................................................... 291 Hampton, Va.,.................................................... 55, 118 Hancock, General, 177, 178, 209, 213, 215, 223, 225, 226, 229, 230, 239, 242, 321, 357 Hancock's Night Walkers. ........................................ 222 Haney, William...................................................... 331 Hapgood, J. ........................................................ 108 Hapgood, Oliver, ...................................................... 107 Hardy, Patrick, ...................................................... 152 Harper's Ferry, ................................................51, 150, 256 Harper, Robert,..................................................
Advertiser, published 1762 Boston Chronicle, published 1767 Columbian Sentinel, published 1788 Advertiser, first daily paper published Dec. 16, 1797 Whole number published in Boston, 109, 1850 Whole number published in Boston, about 200, 1880 Number of daily papers in the City, 8, 1880 Nickel money Three-cent pieces put in circulation, 1865 Five cent pieces put in circulation, 1875 Night Soil Contractors begin to be employed by the City, June, 1828 Night-Walkers arrested in the City in one night, Apr. 23, 1851 183 arrested in the City in one night, May 7, 1870 Non-Importation League formed of Boston merchants, Aug., 1769 North-Eastern Boundary question, a sensation, Feb., 1839 Northern Lights alarm the inhabitants, March, 1718 Nooks Hill at the north-west part of South Boston, 1776 Northampton District raised to grade 17, 1874 Nursery Thirteen acres reserved on the Neck Lands, Dec. 17, 1827 O. Oath of
, 98 Mill, Water 98 Mill, Wind 98, 99 Miller, William 99 Mint House, 99 Model Artists, 99 Moody and Sankey, 99 Monuments, 99 Money, 99, 100 Morrill, Asa 100 Mummy, 100 Murder, 100 to 104 Murray, Rev. John 104 Museums, 104 Music Hall, 104 Muster, 104 N. Nantasket, 105 Navy Yard, 105 Neck Lands, 105 Negroes, 105 Negro Hill, 105 New Boston, 105 Newsboys, 105 Newspapers, 105, 106 Nickel Money, 106 Night Soil, 106 Night-Walkers, 106 Non-Importation, 106 North-Eastern Boundary, 106 Northern Lights, 106 Nooks Hill, 106 Northampton District, 106 Nursery, 106 O. Oath of Allegiance, 106 Odd Fellows, 107 Odd Fellows' Hall, 107 Odd Fellows' Monument, 107 Oakland Garden, 107 Old Houses, 107, 108 Old Persons, 108 Ole Bull, 108 Omnibus, 108, 109 Orang Outang, 109 Ox, Roast 109 P. Paine, Thomas 109 Paine Hall, 109 Paine, Robert Treat 109 Packets, 109 Palml
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.24 (search)
Brown, H. W., Surgeon. Special Order, No. 129, Tupelo, July 22, ‘62. Dec. 31, ‘62, Atlanta, Ga., Fair Ground Hospital. brothers, Oscar C., Assistant Surgeon, passed Board 26 Aug., ‘62. Dec. 31, ‘62, 24th Mississippi Regiment (Murfreesboro), Oct. 31, ‘63, 24th Mississippi Regiment, Charleston. Nov. 20, ‘63, passed Board at Charleston for promotion to Surgeon, Headquarters A. T., Dalton, Ga. Assigned to 24th Mississippi as Surgeon. Bowers, James A., Surgeon, August 31, ‘63. Chief Surgeon Walkers Division. Bowd, John S., Surgeon, Dec. 31, ‘62, resigned near Tallahassee, Fla., March 11, ‘63. Notification from the Surgeon-General of resignation. Brown, Thos. Lewellen Briteberry, Assistant Surgeon, appointed by Secretary War, 2d June, ‘63, to rank from May, ‘62, reported to General Bragg, passed Nov. 28, ‘62, 2d Tennesssee Regiment, Jan. 20, ‘64. Appointment, returned to SurgeonGene-ral. Said to have died at Academy Hospital. Bolan, M. J., Surgeon,
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The career of General Jackson (search)
eps in the cemetery at Lexington, Va., hard by the grave of his chief, Stonewall Jackson. Second, Jackson was noted for the secrecy with which he made and executed his plans. He is reported to have said: If my coat knew my plans, I would burn it at once. He concealed his plans from even his staff officers and subordinate generals, and was accustomed to say, If I can keep my movements secret from our own people, I will have little difficulty in concealing them from the enemy. Colonel Walkers story, My old Colonel, J. A. Walker, afterwards made brigadier—general and put in command of the Stonewall Brigade, told me this incident: While Ewell's Division was occupying Swift Run Gap, and Jackson had gone to meet Milroy at McDowell, Walker went up to Ewell's headquarters one morning to see him on some important matter, when Ewell passed him, and merely gave him the military salute, and went on to the front of the yard, where he spent some time walking back and forth in evident
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Addenda by the Editor. (search)
division. Smith's Battalion. Maj. M. Smith. McCants' BatteryCapt. R. P. McCants. Fowler's BatteryCapt. W. H. Fowler. Turner's BatteryCapt. W. B. Turner. P. R. Cleburnes division. Swett's Battalion. Swett's BatteryLieut. H. Shannon. Semple's BatteryLieut. R. W. Goldthwaite. Calvert's [J. H.] BatteryLieut. T. J. Key. C. L. Stevenson's division. Carnes' BatteryCapt. W. W. Carnes. Rowan's BatteryCapt. John B. Rowan. Max Van Den. Corput's Battery. Walkers division. Martin's Battalion. Maj. Robert Martin. Bledsoe's BatteryCapt. H. M. Bledsoe. Ferguson's BatteryCapt. T. B. Ferguson. Howell's BatteryCapt. E. P. Howell. Hindman's corps. T. C. Hindmans division. Courtney's Battalion. Maj. A. R. Courtney. Dent's BatteryCapt. S. H. Dent. Douglass' BatteryCapt. J. P. Douglass. Garrity's BatteryCapt. J. Garrity. J. C. Brecktnridge's division. Slocomb's BatteryCapt. C. H. Slocomb. Cobb's BatteryLieut. F. J. G
Fugitives discovered and killed. St. Louis, Dec. 14. --A special dispatch to the Republican, from Independence, says that Adson, wounded, and Ball, who escaped from Walkers, were found yesterday secreted in the woods, were surrounded and ordered to surrender. After conferring together they drew their pistols and replied, they would die first. They were immediately fired upon and killed.