The Photographic History of the Civil War: Soldier life, secret serviceReview of Reviews Company, 1911 - United States Thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with test by many special authorities. |
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Page 29
... Sherman to his wife , in a letter from camp in front of Vicksburg , dated April 10 , 1863 , " the newspaper corre- spondents , encouraged by the political generals , and even President Lincoln , having full swing in this and all camps ...
... Sherman to his wife , in a letter from camp in front of Vicksburg , dated April 10 , 1863 , " the newspaper corre- spondents , encouraged by the political generals , and even President Lincoln , having full swing in this and all camps ...
Page 34
... Sherman , newly command- ing in the West , to accumulate the vast supplies he would need for his big army of one hundred thousand men , ere again he started forth another two hundred miles into the bowels of the land , and every mile he ...
... Sherman , newly command- ing in the West , to accumulate the vast supplies he would need for his big army of one hundred thousand men , ere again he started forth another two hundred miles into the bowels of the land , and every mile he ...
Page 52
... Sherman's army during its long Atlanta campaign . These commissary stores were obtained at convenient shipping- points , by contracts let after due advertisement by the com- missary officers . They were apportioned by the commissary ...
... Sherman's army during its long Atlanta campaign . These commissary stores were obtained at convenient shipping- points , by contracts let after due advertisement by the com- missary officers . They were apportioned by the commissary ...
Page 78
... Sherman by name , said they surely would if they didn't quit straggling . There were half - fledged Zouaves , like the Fourteenth New York ( Brooklyn ) , and full- rigged Zouaves , albeit their jackets and “ knickers were gray and only ...
... Sherman by name , said they surely would if they didn't quit straggling . There were half - fledged Zouaves , like the Fourteenth New York ( Brooklyn ) , and full- rigged Zouaves , albeit their jackets and “ knickers were gray and only ...
Page 102
... Sherman took the helm in the West . With Sherman Major - General Blair fought in Georgia and through the Carolinas . BAKER , OF CALIFORNIA California contributed twelve military organiza- tions to the Federal forces , but none of them ...
... Sherman took the helm in the West . With Sherman Major - General Blair fought in Georgia and through the Carolinas . BAKER , OF CALIFORNIA California contributed twelve military organiza- tions to the Federal forces , but none of them ...
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Common terms and phrases
Allan Pinkerton Antietam April arms Army of Northern artillery Atlanta balloon battalion batteries battle boys brigade Bull Run camp campaign Captain captured cavalry Chattanooga cipher City Point Colonel command Confederacy Confederate army COPYRIGHT Department despatch drill duty enlisted Federal armies field fighting fire flag forage force FORT MCREE fought Fredericksburg front gallant Gettysburg Government Grant gray guns headquarters hundred Infantry killed later leaders Lee's Lieutenant lines Major-General Maryland McClellan ment messages miles military movements muskets mustered North Northern Virginia operations organized PATRIOT PUB Petersburg photograph shows Pinkerton Potomac Quartermaster's railroad ranks regiment REVIEW OF REVIEWS REVIEWS CO Richmond Rifles River road scouts Second Bull Run secret service sent Sheridan Sherman Signal Corps signal officer soldier South Southern spies station supplies telegraph Tennessee thousand tion took troops uniforms Union armies veterans volunteers wagons Washington Wesley Merritt West wire wounded York Zouaves
Popular passages
Page 118 - Not for fame or reward, not for place or for rank, not lured by ambition or goaded by necessity, but in simple obedience to duty as they understood it, these men suffered all, sacrificed all, dared all, and died.
Page 122 - So let the wide world wag as it will, We'll be gay and happy still." The contrast between the sentiment of the song and the environment of the column was sufficiently striking.
Page 326 - ... movements are developed, and shall only fear an attack on my right, which I shall make every preparation for guarding against and resisting.
Page 128 - ... that body of incomparable infantry, the Army of Northern Virginia, which for four years carried the revolt on its bayonets, opposing a constant front to the mighty concentration of power brought against it ; which, receiving terrible blows, did not fail to give the like ; and which, vital in all its parts, died only with its annihilation.
Page 5 - The photographic history of the Civil war . . . Francis Trevelyan Miller, editor-in-chief; Robert S. Lanier, managing editor. Thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities.
Page 328 - I was with General Meade near General Sickles, whose troops seemed very badly disposed on that part of the field. At my suggestion, General Meade sent me to the left to examine the condition of affairs, and I continued on till I reached Little Round Top. There were no troops on it and it was used as a signal station. I saw that this was the key of the whole position, and that our troops in the woods in front of it could not see the ground in front of them, so that the enemy would come upon them before...