President Lincoln, Volume 2Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1933 - 772 pages |
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Page 471
... thousand . New Jersey had voted the Republi- can ticket in 1860 , and went Democratic in 1862. Michigan's Republican majority was reduced from twenty thousand to six thousand . The Wisconsin delegation was evenly divided . Lin- coln's ...
... thousand . New Jersey had voted the Republi- can ticket in 1860 , and went Democratic in 1862. Michigan's Republican majority was reduced from twenty thousand to six thousand . The Wisconsin delegation was evenly divided . Lin- coln's ...
Page 530
... thousand men in Indiana belonged to these societies . Lincoln refused to be alarmed about them , saying that no one could make him believe that there were in Indiana a hundred thousand disloyal men in oath - bound organizations whose ...
... thousand men in Indiana belonged to these societies . Lincoln refused to be alarmed about them , saying that no one could make him believe that there were in Indiana a hundred thousand disloyal men in oath - bound organizations whose ...
Page 545
... thousand strong ; fifty or sixty thousand Confederates , well posted , fight with them ; the Grand Army is prodigiously whipped - loses twenty thousand— and then marches back to camp . After a month or more of recruiting , it comes ...
... thousand strong ; fifty or sixty thousand Confederates , well posted , fight with them ; the Grand Army is prodigiously whipped - loses twenty thousand— and then marches back to camp . After a month or more of recruiting , it comes ...
Contents
CHAPTER PAGE XXXIII ALL QUIET ALONG THE POTOMAC | 403 |
GENERAL POPES SCRAPE | 419 |
THE BATTLE OF ANTIETAM | 430 |
Copyright | |
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Abraham Lincoln Antietam appointed arrest asked Atlanta attack authority B. H. Liddell Hart Badeau battle battle of Antietam believe Burnside Cabinet campaign capture cavalry Chase command Confederacy Confederate Congress Constitution Copperhead declared defeated Democratic elected emancipation Emancipation Proclamation enemy favor fight fought Fredericksburg Frémont Gettysburg Gideon Governor Grant Halleck Henry Winter Davis honor Hood Hooker hope horse Ibid Illinois Jefferson Davis John Hay John Hay's Diary Johnston knew Lee's army letter loyal Major-General Manassas March McClellan Meade military move nation negroes night North officers peace Pennsylvania Pollard Pope Potomac President Lincoln President's Proclamation Rappahannock reason Rebel rebellion Republican resignation retreat Richmond River Rosecrans Secretary Senate sent Seward Sherman slavery slaves soldiers South southern Stanton Stonewall Jackson success surrender thought thousand tion told took troops Union Army United Vallandigham victory Virginia Washington White House wrote