Pictorial History of the Civil War in the United States of America, Volume 3D. McKay, 1866 - United States |
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Page 31
... fell , pierced by three bullets , and several of his staff were killed or wounded . Jackson was the superior of Lee as an executive officer , in moral force and in personal magnetism , and his loss to the Confederacy , and especially to ...
... fell , pierced by three bullets , and several of his staff were killed or wounded . Jackson was the superior of Lee as an executive officer , in moral force and in personal magnetism , and his loss to the Confederacy , and especially to ...
Page 34
... fell back , and fought gallantly at the angle of the roads . This line , too , soon began to bend . The Confederates fell furiously upon it , and broke it , and at ten o'clock in the morning , after a struggle for six hours , they took ...
... fell back , and fought gallantly at the angle of the roads . This line , too , soon began to bend . The Confederates fell furiously upon it , and broke it , and at ten o'clock in the morning , after a struggle for six hours , they took ...
Page 36
... fell back while skirmishing , and finally made a stand at Salem Church , on Salem Heights , toward which both Sedgwick and McLaws had been hastening , and where the latter had already arrived , and was forming a line of battle ...
... fell back while skirmishing , and finally made a stand at Salem Church , on Salem Heights , toward which both Sedgwick and McLaws had been hastening , and where the latter had already arrived , and was forming a line of battle ...
Page 50
... fell back , and at dusk recrossed the Rappahannock with a hundred prisoners , after a loss of about five hundred Stuart reported his loss at six hundred men , among whom was Gen- eral W. H. F. Lee , wounded . men . Pleasanton's cavalry ...
... fell back , and at dusk recrossed the Rappahannock with a hundred prisoners , after a loss of about five hundred Stuart reported his loss at six hundred men , among whom was Gen- eral W. H. F. Lee , wounded . men . Pleasanton's cavalry ...
Page 51
... fell upon him . Then began an unequal struggle , and an equal race , toward the Poto- mac . The fugitives were swifter - footed than their pursuers , and might all have escaped , had not Johnston's division , which had gained the rear ...
... fell upon him . Then began an unequal struggle , and an equal race , toward the Poto- mac . The fugitives were swifter - footed than their pursuers , and might all have escaped , had not Johnston's division , which had gained the rear ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance army artillery assailants assault Atlanta attack Banks battery battle BATTLE OF CHICKAMAUGA Battle of Gettysburg Bragg bridge brigade Burnside Captain captured cavalry Cemetery Hill Charleston Chattanooga Chickamauga Colonel column command Confederates corps Creek crossed Culp's Hill destroyed direction division expedition Ferry fight fire flank force Fort Fisher Fort Sumter Fort Wagner front garrison Gettysburg Government Grant gun-boats guns head-quarters heavy Hooker hundred infantry intrenchments July killed Knoxville latter Lee's Little Round Top Longstreet Lookout Mountain loss Meade Meade's miles Mississippi Morgan morning Morris Island moved movement Murfreesboro National nearly night o'clock officers Ohio ordered passed Pennsylvania pontoon bridge position Potomac prisoners pushed raid railway Rapid Anna Rappahannock re-enforcements rear regiments repulsed retreat Richmond Ridge River road Rosecrans Seminary Ridge sent Sherman skirmishers soldiers Tennessee Tennessee River thousand tion troops Union Valley vessels Virginia wounded York