Southern History of the War: The First Year of the War |
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Page 5
... - Spirit of Patriotic Devotion in the South . - Supply of Arms in the South . - The Federal Government and the State of Maryland . - The Pros- pect ....... ..PAGE 41 CHAPTER III . Confidence of the North . - Characteristic.
... - Spirit of Patriotic Devotion in the South . - Supply of Arms in the South . - The Federal Government and the State of Maryland . - The Pros- pect ....... ..PAGE 41 CHAPTER III . Confidence of the North . - Characteristic.
Page 40
... arms , had been seized by the Alabama troops ; Fort Morgan , in Mobile Bay , had been taken ; Forts Jackson , St. Philip , and Pike , near New Orleans , had been captured by the Louis- iana troops ; the Pensacola Navy - Yard and Forts ...
... arms , had been seized by the Alabama troops ; Fort Morgan , in Mobile Bay , had been taken ; Forts Jackson , St. Philip , and Pike , near New Orleans , had been captured by the Louis- iana troops ; the Pensacola Navy - Yard and Forts ...
Page 41
... Arms in the South . The Federal Government and the State of Maryland . - The Prospect . THE circumstances of the advent of Mr. Lincoln to Wash- ington were not calculated to inspire confidence in his courage or wisdom , or in the ...
... Arms in the South . The Federal Government and the State of Maryland . - The Prospect . THE circumstances of the advent of Mr. Lincoln to Wash- ington were not calculated to inspire confidence in his courage or wisdom , or in the ...
Page 44
... arms , with the general hirsute appearance of the Western countryman , made up the principal features of the new President . The inauguration ceremony was attended by a most extraor- dinary military display , under the immediate ...
... arms , with the general hirsute appearance of the Western countryman , made up the principal features of the new President . The inauguration ceremony was attended by a most extraor- dinary military display , under the immediate ...
Page 52
... arms . Numerous large transports were employed by the government for the con- veyance of soldiers and war material , and the signs of the times betokened that the administration was preparing for a long and bloody struggle . Within ten ...
... arms . Numerous large transports were employed by the government for the con- veyance of soldiers and war material , and the signs of the times betokened that the administration was preparing for a long and bloody struggle . Within ten ...
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Southern History of the War: The Third Year of the War Edward Alfred Pollard No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
A. P. Hill Abolitionists Abraham Lincoln advance arms army artillery attack battery battle battle-field Beauregard brigade camp campaign Capt captured cavalry Centreville Charleston Cheat Mountain Chickahominy citizens Colonel command Confederate forces Congress Constitution Convention Cotton Hill Davis declared defeated defence Donelson election enemy enemy's engaged evacuation federacy Federal forces field fight fire flag Floyd Fort Craig Fort Donelson Fort Sumter Governor gunboats guns House hundred infantry Island Jackson Johnston Kentucky killed Legislature Lincoln government loss Manassas McCulloch ment miles military Mississippi Missouri Missourians morning Mountain movement Nashville night North Northern o'clock occupied officers ordered party portion position Potomac President Price prisoners railroad rear regiment reinforcements retreat Richmond river road Roanoke Island Senate shot side slavery slaves soldiers South Carolina spirit Sterling Price Sumter surrender taken Tennessee territory thousand tion Union victory vote Washington whole wounded Yankee