| George Brinton McClellan - Maryland Campaign, 1862 - 1864 - 500 pages
...shall be such as to give an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. — (Unanimous.) II. If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then...bridges, repairing railroads, and stocking them with material sufficient for supplying the army, should at once be collected for both the Orange and Alexandria... | |
| William Swinton - Campaign literature - 1864 - 54 pages
...was the adoption of the other alternative agreed upon by the Corps Commanders in the following terms: "If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then...the Rappahannock at the earliest possible moment." But this General McClellan did not do. He had determined to move the army to the Peninsula, and in... | |
| William Swinton - Campaign literature - 1864 - 40 pages
...entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) II. If the foregoing cannot txs, the army should then be moved against the enemy, behind...at the earliest possible moment, and the means for constructing bridges, repairing railroads and stocking them with materials sufficient for supplying... | |
| Horace Greeley - Slavery - 1866 - 842 pages
...give an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) " If the foregoing can not be, the army should then be moved against the enemy,...the Rappahannock, at the earliest possible moment; a"'l the means for reconstructing bridges, repairing railroads and stocking them with material sufficient... | |
| George Brinton McClellan - Maryland Campaign, 1862 - 1864 - 280 pages
...Washington shall be such as to give an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) " II. If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then be moved against the enemy, behind the llappahannock, at the earliest possible moment, and tbe means for reconstructing bridges, repairing... | |
| William Swinton - Campaign literature - 1864 - 40 pages
...shall be such as to give an entire feeling of secu- i rity for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) r' II. If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then be moved against the enemy, behind the ', MRappahannock, at the earliest possible moment, and the means for constructing bridges, repairing... | |
| George Brinton McClellan - Maryland Campaign, 1862 - 1864 - 500 pages
...shall be such as to give an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. — (Unanimous.) II. If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then be moved against the enemy, behind the Rappabannock at the earliest possible moment, and the means for reconstructing bridges, repairing railroads,... | |
| William Swinton - Campaign literature - 1864 - 44 pages
...the adoption of the other alternative agreed upon by the Corps Commanders in the following terms : " If the foregoing cannot be, the army should then be moved against the enemy behind the Rappahaimock at the earliest possible moment." But this General McClellan did not do. He had determined... | |
| Joseph Hartwell Barrett - Biography & Autobiography - 1865 - 878 pages
...an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) II. If the foregoing can not be, the army should then be moved against the enemy,...collected, for both the Orange and Alexandria and Acquia and Richmond Railroads. (Unanimous.) NOTE. — That with the forts on the right bank of the... | |
| Joseph Hartwell Barrett - Biography & Autobiography - 1865 - 972 pages
...an entire feeling of security for its safety from menace. (Unanimous.) II. If the foregoing can not be, the army should then be moved against the enemy,...collected, for both the Orange and Alexandria and Acquia and Richmond Railroads. (Unanimous.) NOTE. — That with the forts on the right bank of the... | |
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