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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 4.. Search the whole document.
Found 14 total hits in 10 results.
Spottsylvania (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at
Fort McAllister (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at
R. Mca (search for this): chapter 4.20
Gershom Mott (search for this): chapter 4.20
Waldo Merriam (search for this): chapter 4.20
Thomas W. Eayre (search for this): chapter 4.20
Robert McAllister (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at
May 12th (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at
May 12th, 1864 AD (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at
13th (search for this): chapter 4.20
McAllister's brigade at the bloody angle. by Robert McAllister, Brevet Major-General, U. S. V.
The writer of the article on Hand-to-hand fighting at Spotsylvania gives all the honor of holding the salient on May 12th, 1864, to the Sixth Corps.
It was the Second Corps that made the grand charge of May 12th, and my brigade
On the 13th came an order for consolidation, by which this brigade became the Third Brigade, Third Division, Second Corps, under which name it continued to the end of the war.--R. Mca. of that corps, the First Brigade of the Fourth Division, helped to defend the Bloody angle from the first to the last of the fearful struggle.
The brigade which I commanded during all these operations was composed of the 1st and 16th Massachusetts, the 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 11th New Jersey, and the 26th and 115th Pennsylvania.
In the great charge at dawn it was in the second line.
At first we moved slowly up through the woods.
When the first line reached the open field at