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POETRY AND INCIDENTS.

But take your gun and go, John,

Take your gun and go,

For Ruth can drive the oxen, John,
And I can use the hoe.

I've heard my grandsire tell, John,
(He fought at Bunker Hill,)
How he counted all his life and wealth
His country's offering still.

Shall we shame the brave old blood, John,
That flowed on Monmouth plain?
No! take your gun and go, John,

If you ne'er return again.

Then take your gun and go, etc.

Our army's short of blankets, John,
Then take this heavy pair;

I spun and wove them when a girl,
And worked them with great care.
There's a rose in every corner, John,
And there's my name you see;
On the cold ground they'll warmer feel
That they were made by me.
Then take your gun and go, etc.

And if it be God's will, John.

You ne'er come back again,

I'll do my best for the children, John,
In sorrow, want, and pain.
In winter nights I'll teach them all
That I have learned at school,
To love the country, keep the laws,
Obey the Saviour's rule.
and etc.
go,

Then take your gun

And in the village church, John,
And at our humble board,

We'll pray that God will keep you, John,
And heavenly aid afford;

And all who love their country's cause
Will love and bless you too,

And nights and mornings they will pray
For freedom and for you.

Then take your gun

and go, etc.

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The contest decided with peace to the nation;
My hero retired 'mid the loud acclamation
Of men without number, and praise without measure;
My own heart exulted in transports of pleasure.

O my happiness! O my happiness! O my happiness!
How precarious!

Our Freedom, with order, by Faction rejected,
A new Constitution our country erected;

My hero was raised to preside over the Union,
And his cares intercepted our blissful communion:

O my happiness! O my happiness! O my happiness!
How precarious!

Declining the trust of his dignified station,
With joy to the seat of his dear estimation,
Surrounded with honors, he humbly retreated;
Sweet hopes, softly whispered, my bliss was completed,
O my happiness! O my happiness! O my happiness!
How precarious!

When the pangs of disease had fatally seized him,
My heart would have yielded its life to have eased him;
I prayed the Most High if for death He designed him,
That he would not permit me to loiter behind him.
O my Washington! O my Washington! O my Wash-
ington!
All was dubious,

When hope was all fled, and I saw him resigning
His soul to his God without dread or repining,
What, my heart, were thy feelings, lamenting, ad-
miring,

To see him so nobly, so calmly expiring?

O my Washington! O my Washington! O my Washington! Has forsaken us!

When I followed his corpse with grief unconfined,
And saw to the tomb his dear relics consigned,
When I left him in silence and darkness surrounded,
With what pangs of fresh anguish my bosom was
wounded.

O my Washington! O my Washington! O my Washington!

Has forsaken us!

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I have seen the primal entry
On the books beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever,
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover.
On a midnight dank and dreary,
When my form was weak and weary
Then my spirit left its dwelling,
Left it in another's keeping;
In the kind care of another,
Of a loving angel brother,
Who had left his earth-friends weeping,
And had crossed the river swelling,
But had found a passage over-
Found a backward passage over,
Through the dark bridge with the cover,
And had made another entry
On the shore this side the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover.

As my spirit made its entry
On the shore beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover,
There I met the writing angel
With his records all before him,
And a halo hanging o'er him,
With his books named in the evangel.

With an anxious, saddened feeling
Through my inner spirit stealing,
Turned I to the writing angel,
With his books named in the evangel,
Just to learn the situation

Of our struggling, bleeding nation;
Just to learn this from the entry
On the books beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover.

With a tear the angel said it:
"There's your debt and there's your credit-
Just inspect each primal entry
On the books this side the sentry,

Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river."

Turned I quick aside the cover,
And I glanced the pages over,
And I found the primal entry
On the books beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
Was before the old embargo,
When the Dutch ship with her cargo,
Ploughed her keel across our waters,
With her fettered sons and daughters,
'Twas a charge for "countless terrors,"
And the "middle passage horrors."

Then the next or second entry
On the books beyond the sentry,

Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover,
Was for "wails of wives and mothers,
And for sisters, fathers, brothers,
When the auction-hammer thundered
That all kindred ties were sundered."
Then the next and final entry
On the books beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river,
At the bridge that passes over,
At the dark bridge with the cover,
Was for "proceeds of the cargo,
Brought before the old embargo,"
And I found the angel had it,
With each mill of interest added—
But we pass now to the credit
As the writing angel had it.
Turned I then again the cover,
And I searched the pages over,
But I found no credit entry
On the books beyond the sentry,
Of the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside the river;
Then I gave unto the angel
All his books named in the evangel,
When a deeper, saddened feeling
Came across my spirit stealing;
But the angel sternly said it-
"You shall have your honest credit."

"When your land is filled with terrors
Like the Middle Passage horrors,

All the horrors of each cargo Since the Dutch keel ploughed your waters, With her sable sons and daughters,

Long before the slave embargo:

"When your wails of wives and mothers,
Of your sisters, fathers, brothers,
Shall amount through all your slaughters
To the wails of sons and daughters,
Of the sable sons and daughters,
Since the auction-hammer thundered
That all human ties were sundered:

"When the proceeds of the cargo,
Brought before the old embargo—
When the proceeds as you had it,
With each mill of interest added,
Shall be squandered in your slaughters,
'Mid your wails of wives and daughters,
You will get your honest credit!"

Then he closed the opening cover,
When again I crossed the river,
By the sentry standing ever
Gaunt and grim beside that river;
Then my spirit sought its dwelling,
Left within a brother's keeping,
Of an angel brother's keeping,
When that brother left my dwelling,
And recrossed the river swelling,
From this land with sorrow laden,
To his better home in Aidenn.

EXETER, September, 1862.

INDEX.

EXPLANATION OF ABBREVIATIONS IN THE INDEX.

D. stands for Diary of Events; Doc. for Documents; and P. for Poetry, Rumors and Incidents.

D. 10
D.
18

D. 43

Abbeville, Miss., fight near,

PAGE

D. 20
evacuated by the rebels,
D. 21
ABBOTT, T., Lieut. Com., report of
the fight off Charleston, Doc. 409
Abolitionist, a Union soldier, P. 81
"Abraham Lincoln," by W. D. Gal-
lagher,
P. 85
Accomac, Va., the slaves in, P. 17
Act for enrolling the National forces
passed,
D. 46, 49
ADAMS, CHARLES FRANCIS, D. 48, 76
ADAMS, GREEN, of Ky.,
D. 59

ADAMS, Major, First N. Y. Cavalry, D. 74
Adelaide, schooner, captured, D. 5
"Adventurer," schooner, captured,

"Agnes," schooner, captured,
Alabama," privateer captures by,
D. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 23, 39,
48, 51, 61, 70, 77.

debate in the British House of

Commons on,

D. 58
Alabama, Governor Shorter's ap-
peal to the people of, Doc. 290
"Alabama," schooner, captured, D. 64
"Aldebaran," schooner, captured, D. 54
Aldie, Va., Union raid into,

ANDERSON, GEO. B., rebel, death of, D. 4
ANDERSON, Gen., rebel. See Chancel-
lorsville,
Doc. 599
ANDERSON, P., Gen., rebel, Doc. 170
ANDREW, JOHN A., Gov., authorized

to raise colored regiments, D. 86
ANDREWS, C. M., Major. See Hay-
market, Va.
ANDREWS, JOHN W., Col., report of
the battle of Fredericksburgh,
Doc. 89
"A New Border State Song," by
Paul Siogvolk,
P. 12
A New Cassabianca, an incident of
the Harriet Lane,
P. 38
“Anglia," steamship, capture__of,
Doc. 41

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PAGE

and Twelfth corps of,

Union troops surprised at,
reconnoissance to,

D. 50

D. 68

Alexandria, Miss., occupied,

D. 71

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A Patriotic Parson,

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Arbitrary Arrests." See Indiana,

Annandale, Va., Unionists surprised
at,
"Anna," yacht, captured,
"Annie," steamship, ran the block-
ade,
"Annie Dees," schooner, captured,
D. 16
"Ann Maria," schooner, captured,
D. 16
Antietam, Md., notice of the battle
of,
D. 2; Doc. 13, 220
an incident of,
P. 18
loss of the Fiftieth Georgia at, P. 13
the trophies of,
P. 29
"Antona," account of the capture
of,
Doc. 345
An Union Soldier, no Abolitionist, P. 81
Apache Pass, N. M., rebel account
of the battle of,
P. 20
Apalachicola, Fla., account of the
Expedition to,
Doc. 186
P. 49
D. 33

second attempt of,

D. 46

ARNOLD, FRANCIS,

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A Romance of the War,

D. 75

Doc.

A Song of Lamentation, by Ed-
mundus Scotus,

P. 27

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otism of,

P. 9

See Vallandigham.

Amite River, La., fight on,

D. 73

A Recruiting Rally,

AMMEN, D., Com.,

Doc. 505

"Ariel," schooner, captured,

D. 45
D. 45
P. 25
D. 16

fight at,
AUGUR, C. C., Gen. See Port Hud-

son.

Austin, Miss., account of the fight
Doc. 634
"Avenger," capture of the, D. 32
AVERILL, W. W., Gen., D. 11, 19, 49,
56; Doc. 458, 606
A Way of Disgracing Soldiers, P. 11
AYRES, JOHN A., Lieut. Irish Bri-
gade,
Doc. 52

D. 60

B

A Mother's Prayer,

A Mother's Story,
AMORY, T. I. C., Col., report of op-
erations in North-Carolina, Doc. 257
An Appeal, by Oliver Wendell
Holmes,

P. 21
P. 14

66

Ariel," U. S. mail steamer, cap-
tured by the Alabama,

P. 26

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D. 23
"Aries" steamer captured,
D. 58
Arkadelphia, Ark., fight at, D. 46
Arkansas, Col. Clayton's raid into,
Doc. 601
Arkansas Cavalry, first loyal regi-
ment of,
Doc. 553; D. 40, 61
first infantry of,
Doc. 554
Arkansas Post, Ark., official reports
of the battle at,
Doc. 359

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Proclamation promulgating Presi-
dent Lincoln's Emancipation
Act,
Doc. 293
report of his operations on the
Opelousas River,
Doc. 552
See Bayou Teche, La.

notice of,

D. 49

Report of the battle of Cane Hill,

watering his horse in hell,

P. 11

Doc. 188

Doc. 325

"Beauregard," rebel steamer, ran

notices of,

D. 19, 23. 29, 45

D. 59

the blockade,

D. 76

BLYTH, Col., rebel. See Rebel Bar-

BEHм, C. W. F., Capt.,

D. 23

barities.

25

D. 84

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D.

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D. 11

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D. 21

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D. 49

BENJAMIN, J. P., circular to foreign

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BENJAMIN, PARK,
BENTICK, Mr. See Charleston, S. C.
BENTON, WM. G., Brig.-Gen., report
of the battle of Port Gibson,
Doc. 572
Bemis Landing, La., expedition from,
D. 76
Berkley, Pa., draft troubles in, D. 4
Berlin, Md., skirmish at,
D. 20
BERRY, W. W., Lieut.-Col., report of
the battle of Murfreesboro, Doc. 139
Berry's Ferry, Va., fight at, D. 74
Berrysville, Va., Major Keenan's re-
connoissance to,

D. 44
Doc. 411
P. 14, 29

D. 11
Doc. 221

Bolivar Heights, Va., Union pickets
at, attacked,
Bolivar, Tenn., fights near, D. 46, 52;
Bombardment of Vicksburgh, deli-
cated to Gen. Earle Van Dorn, P. 41
BONHAM, M. L., Gov, of South-Caro-
lina, message of, April 3, Doc. 500
"Booneville," his account of the
battle of Cane Hill,
Doc. 184
Boston, Mass., drafting commenced
in,

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D. 8

D. 4

D. 51

D. 73

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D.

9

BOTTS, JAMES C.,

D. 55

D. 62

reconnoissance to,

D. 18

BOURNE, THOMAS,

Doc. 500

Barbee's Cross-Roads, Va., account
of the fight at,

fight near,

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BOWEN, JOHN S., Gen.,

D. 69

Doc. 177

BERTRAM, HENRY, Lieut.-Col. Twen-

BARCLAY, J. B., heroism of the wife

of,

P. 42

Barclay's Fort, N. M., rumored at-

tieth Wis., report of the battle
of Prairie Grove, Ark.,
Berwick's Bay, La., fight near,

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Doc.

68

D.

55

BOYLE, J. T., Brig. Gen., Doc. 208; D. 31
BOYLE, JOHN, Ninth Kentucky Caval-

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Berwick City, La., skirmish at,
Bethel, Vt., curious proceedings in, P.

D. 54

ry,

D. 1

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Beverly, Va., fight at,

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BARING BROTHERS,

D. 52

BARKER, DAVID,

P. 55

Big Bear Creek, Mo., fight at,
Big Hill, Ky., fight near,

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BARKSDALE,

measures,

his retaliatory

BILLINGS,—

Lieut.-Col.

Third

D. 2; Doc. 185

N. II. Vols.,

BARLOW, FRANCIS, Gen.,

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BARNEY, HIRAM, report on sales of

cotton,

D. 47

"Baron de Castine," brig, cap-

BIRGE,

tured,

D. 9

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P. 49
D. 24
report of his expedition into Ar-
kansas,
Doc. 250
Col. Thirteenth Conn.,
Doc. 44, 545
BIRNEY, D. B., Major-Gen., Doc. 550
BIRNEY, WILLIAM, Lieut.-Col. Thirty-
eighth N. Y. S. V.,
Doc.
Black Bayou, Miss., fight at, D.
Black flag advocated by rebels, P. 24
Black River, account of the battle of,
Doc. 620
Blackwater Bridge, Va., reconnois-
sance to,
D. 53
Blackwater, Va., rebels dispersed at
the,
D. 16
Doc. 42
D.

BRAGG, BRAXTON, Gen., official re-
port of the battle of Stone River,

Doe. 165

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Battle Ode to Virginia,

Batesville, Ark., descent on,
Baton Rouge, La., occupation of, D. 26
Fight at,
Doc. 223
P. 21

D.

42

BLAIR, F. P., Gen. See Chickasaw

December 4,

Doc, 283

Bluffs.

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at,

+Charleston,

BAYARD, GEORGE D., Brig.-Gen., D. 12, 26
Bayou Bontouca, La., skirmish at, D. 17
Bayou Sara, La., destruction of rebel
property at,

Bayou Teche, La., report of the fight
Doc. 389
Official report of the operations on
the,
Doc. 527
Bayou Vermilion, La., fight at, D. 65
Bear Creek, Mo., skirmish on, D. 43
Bear River, W. T., account of the
battle of,
Doc. 401
Colonel Connor's report of the bat-
tle of,
Doc. 468
BEARD, OLIVER T., Lieut.-Col., report
of the expedition to Doboy River,
Ga.,
Doc. 200
notices of,
D. 12, 13
Beaufort, N. C., Union meeting in, D. 5
BEAUREGARD, G. T., Major-Gen., re-
port of the battle at Pocotaligo,
Doc. 40
.orders non-combatants to leave
D. 12

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BLODGETT, WELLS II., Lieut., exploit
of,
P. 25
BLOODGOOD, E., Lieut.-Col., account
of the battle of Thompson's Sta-
tion,
Doc. 442
Bloomfield, Ind., Union meeting at,
D.
Bloomfield, Mo., rebel guerrillas
driven out of,
D. 40
Adjutant Poole's descent on, D. 50
Blount's Mills, N. C., account of the
fight at,
Doc. 526
Blue Spring, Mo., fight at,
D. 56
BLUNT, JAMES G., Brig. Gen., report
of the battle of Old Fort Wayne,
Doc. 29

"Break o' Day," capture of the, D. 23
Breathitt Co., Ky., rebels captured

BRECKENRIDGE,, Capt., rebel Sec-
ond Virginia cavalry, Doc. 460
BRECKINRIDGE, Joux C., Gen.

See
Stone River,
Doc. 10
BRECKINRIDGE, W. C. P., Col., rebel,
Doc. 466; D. 49
W. K. M., Col, De 3

BRECKINRIDGE,
BREESE, JOHN,
Brentville, Tenn., official report of

the battle near,

D. 64

Doc. 500

Doc. 248

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debate on the privateer Alabama, D. 58
British Parliament, debate on Am-
erican cruisers,
D. 67
Britton's Lane, Tenn., fight at, Doc. 222
Broad Run, Va., rebel raid near, D. 59
BROADY, K. A., Lieut.-Col., report of
the battle of Chancellorsville,
Doc. 583
BROOKS, W. S., Lieut. Nineteenth
Iowa Regiment,

BROOKS,

notices of,
BYRNES, JAMES,

PAGE

PAGE

PAGE

hatred of the rebels for,
P. 82
Theo. Winthrop's opinion of, P. 35
epigram on,
P. 10
D. 14, 27; P. 50
Doc. 500

plans of the battle of,

Doc. 591, 594, 595
Portland Press account of, Doc. 591
"Carleton's " account,
Doc. 594

C

P.

Doc. 198

D. 76

CALDWELL, "JIM,"

D. 62

Cacapon Bridge, Va., skirmish at, D.
18" Cairo," account of the destruction
of the steamer,
Doc. 253
Doc. 198
CALDWELL, JOHN C., Gen., Doc. 584" Chapman," schooner, seized, D. 55
"Charleston Mercury" advocates

Secretary Stanton's despatch in

reference to,

Chantilly, Va., battle of,

Chapel Hill, Tenn., fight near, D. 51
1 CHAPIN, Gen. See Port Hudson.
CHAPMAN, A. B., Lieut.-Col. Fifty-
seventh New York,

D. 72
Doc. 219

P. 6

Calhoun, Ky., fight near,

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P. 25;

CALHOUN, W. II.,

D. 47

California, rebels in,

Charleston, S. C., non-combatants
ordered to leave,

cavalry arrived from,

Col. Fifty-Third Penn-
sylvania Volunteers,
BROUGHAM, Lord,

BROWN, C. L., Lieut., rebel,
BROWN, E. B., Brig. Gen.,

D. 32; Doc. 350
BROWN, GEORGE, U.S.N., report of
the capture of the "Indianola,"

Doc. 423

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D. 55, 71
D. 64
Gen. Wright's proclamation in, D.
60
Volunteers,
Doc. 468

D. 12
people of, contribute lead pipes, D. 20
people of, return to the city, D. 35
steamers run the blockade of, D. 44
debate in the British House of

Commons on the blockade at, D. 46
price of bread advanced in, D. 49
à rebel steamer destroyed near, D. 75
reports of the naval fights off,

Doc. 407

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See Bear River.
CALLIOUX, —, Capt., colored, D. 78
"Calypso," steamer, ran the block-
ade,
D. 55
CAMERON, CHARLES S., Capt. Ninth
Illinois Cavalry,
D. 65
Camp Jackson, Mo., anniversary of
attack on,
Camp Moore, La., fight at, D. 78
CANDY, CHARLES, Col., D. 29; Doc. 305
Cane Hill, Ark., official reports of the
battle of,
Doc. 182
CANNON, WILLIAM, Gov. of Delaware,
D. 54
proclamation of March 11, 1863,
Doc. 446
Cape Girardeau, Mo., reports of the
battle at,
Doc. 562
Carbondale, Pa., draft troubles in, D. 4
"Carleton's " description of Dahl-
gren's reconnoissance, Doc. 180
his account of the battle of Chan-
cellorsville,
Doc. 594
CARLIN, Col., expedition to Clarkes-
ville, Tenn.,
D. 17
"Caroline," steamer, captured, D. 8
Carpet clothing used at the South, P. 17
CARR, E. A., Gen., report of the bat-
tle of Port Gibson,
Doc. 568
CARROLL, S. S., Gen., report of the
battle of Chancellorsville, Doc. 580
CARRUTH, Lieut.-Col. Thirty-fifth

Massachusetts Regiment, Doc. 196
CARRUTH,, Capt., his battery,Doc. 535
Carrsville, Va., skirmish near, D. 3
fights near,
D. 74
a serious mistake near,
D. 75
CARTER, G. W., Col., rebel,
D. 20; Doc. 562
CARTER, SAMUEL P., Gen.,
D. 82
expedition of, to East-Tennessee,

|

CHEATHAM, WM. S., Gen., rebel, Doc. 174
"Chenango," gunboat, launched, D. 55
Cherokee Indians, repeal of ordi-
nance of secession,
D. 50
"Cherokee," steamer, captured, D. 71
Chicago, Ill., Union meeting at, D. 62
Chicago"Times," suppressed, D. 44, 72
suppression of, rescinded, D. 47
"Chicago Journal," account of the
battle of Prairie Grove, Ark.,

Doc. 74
Chickasaw Bayou, Miss., reports of
the battle at,
Doc. 819
Chickasaw Bluffs, Miss., fight at,
Doc. 320
rebel reports of the battle of, Doc. 322
CHICKERING, THOS. E., Col., expedi-
tion of, into Louisiana,
Doc. 624
notice of,
D. 58
Choctaw Indians captured near Pon-
chatoula, La.,
D. 78
Chuckatuck, Va., reconnoissance to,
fight at,
CHURCHILL,

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official report of the battle of Fred-

ericksburgh, Va.,

Doc. 79

second attempt of, to cross the

Rappahannock,

notices of,

Doc. 396
D. 15, 24, 26, 38;

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Carthage, Tenn., rebel camp sur-

BUSCHBECK, —,

prised near,

lorsville, Va.,

Doc. 580

CASE, CHARLES,

Bush, A. K., Capt., report of the
battle of Murfreesboro, Doc. 149

CASEY, S., Gen.,

D. 79
D. 50
D. 50

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CASSIDY, MICHAEL, Col. Sixth N. Y.
S. V.,
Doc. 540
CATAHOULA, steamer, attacked by
rebels,
CATHCART, CHARLES W.,

"Cincinnati," gunboat, account of
the destruction of,
"Clara," rebel schooner, ran the
blockade,

D. 79

D. 57

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D. 5

D. 50

D.

66

GATHERWOOD, Col.,

D. 11

"But God is over all." By M. H.
Cobb,

P. 2
Butler, Bates Co., Mo., fight near, D. 9
BUTLER, BENJAMIN F., Major-General,
report of the battle of Labadie-
ville,
Doc. 44
order confirming the Confiscation
Act,
Doc. 190
order in reference to negroes, D. 10
continues the order of Gen. Lovell,
D. 12
order assessing rebels,
D. 23
farewell address to the Army of the
Gulf,
Doc. 269; D. 25
address to the people of New-Or-
leans,
Doc. 270
ten thousand dollars offered for

Catholics, Bishop of Ohio denounces
the Knights of the Golden Circle,

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Chambersburgh, Pa., rebels enter,
D. 1; Doc. 1
excitement in,
D. 14
CHAMBLISS, T. E., rebel,
P. 32
Champion Hill, Miss., official reports
of the battle at,
Doc. 615
Chancellorsville, Va., reports of the
battle of,
Doc. 579

D. 70
Catlett's Station, Va., fight at, D. 33
"Caucasian," the, suppressed, D. 72
Cedar Co., Mo., rebel barbarities in,
D. 66
Central Mississippi Railroad destroy-
ed by the Nationals,
Doc. 231
CESNOLA, S. P. D., Col., report of
Stahel's reconnoissance, Doc. 202
CHALMERS, Gen., rebel. See Austin,
Miss.

"Clarita," schooner, captured
CLARK, F. S., Col., report of the bat-
tle of Ponchatoula, La.,
Clarkson, Mo., expedition to, D. 8
CLAY, JAS. B.,
D. 46
CLAYBROOK,
-, Col., rebel, D. 52
CLAYTON, POWELL, Col., account of
his raid into Arkansas, Doc. 601
CLEBURN, P. R., Brig.-Gen., rebel.
See Stone River.

CLENDENIN, D. R., Col.,

Clifton, Tenn., captured,
CLINGMAN, Brig. Gen., rebel,
Clinton, La., skirmish near,
CLOUD, W. F., Major, Kansas Second

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