Pictorial History of the Civil War in the United States of America, Volume 3D. McKay, 1866 - United States |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 97
Page 31
... returning in the gloom to his lines , he and his companions seem to have been mistaken by their friends for Union cavalry , and were fired upon . Jackson fell , pierced by three bullets , and several of his staff were killed or wounded ...
... returning in the gloom to his lines , he and his companions seem to have been mistaken by their friends for Union cavalry , and were fired upon . Jackson fell , pierced by three bullets , and several of his staff were killed or wounded ...
Page 38
... returned to its old quarters opposite Fredericksburg . On the same day the Confederate army resumed its former position on the heights in the rear of the city . The losses of each had been heavy . That of the Confederates was reported ...
... returned to its old quarters opposite Fredericksburg . On the same day the Confederate army resumed its former position on the heights in the rear of the city . The losses of each had been heavy . That of the Confederates was reported ...
Page 48
... returned home . The real designs of Louis Napoleon were now made apparent . His political design was to arrest the march of empire southward on the part of the United States . His religious design was to assist the Church party in ...
... returned home . The real designs of Louis Napoleon were now made apparent . His political design was to arrest the march of empire southward on the part of the United States . His religious design was to assist the Church party in ...
Page 58
... returned , and the Confederates were repulsed with the loss of 1 " The enemy are on our soil , " he said ; " the whole country now looks anxiously to this army to deliver it from the presence of the foe ; our failure to do so will leave ...
... returned , and the Confederates were repulsed with the loss of 1 " The enemy are on our soil , " he said ; " the whole country now looks anxiously to this army to deliver it from the presence of the foe ; our failure to do so will leave ...
Page 60
... returned in full measure by the foe , whose bullets killed and wounded many of the Fifty - sixth . So the BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG was begun . - See Letter of General Cutler to the Governor of Pennsylvania , November 5 , 1863. The ...
... returned in full measure by the foe , whose bullets killed and wounded many of the Fifty - sixth . So the BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG was begun . - See Letter of General Cutler to the Governor of Pennsylvania , November 5 , 1863. The ...
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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