The War of the Rebellion: v. 1-53 [serial no. 1-111] Formal reports, both Union and Confederate, of the first seizures of United States property in the southern states, and of all military operations in the field, with the correspondence, order and returns relating specially thereto. 1880-1898. 111 vU.S. Government Printing Office, 1891 - Confederate States of America Official records produced by the armies of the United States and the Confederacy, and the executive branches of their respective governments, concerning the military operations of the Civil War, and prisoners of war or prisoners of state. Also annual reports of military departments, calls for troops, correspondence between national and state governments, correspondence between Union and Confederate officials. The final volume includes a synopsis, general index, special index for various military divisions, and background information on how these documents were collected and published. Accompanied by an atlas. |
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Page 34
... morning of the 7th three brigades from my command - Plaisted's from the First Divis- ion , Barton's from the Second , and Drake's from the Third - were ordered to report to General Smith , to take part in a demonstration against the ...
... morning of the 7th three brigades from my command - Plaisted's from the First Divis- ion , Barton's from the Second , and Drake's from the Third - were ordered to report to General Smith , to take part in a demonstration against the ...
Page 39
... morning . With two regiments under General Marston and the Fourth New Hampshire , then moving from the extreme left to the right , I formed a line in rear of the center of my position , covering the entrance to a road leading to the ...
... morning . With two regiments under General Marston and the Fourth New Hampshire , then moving from the extreme left to the right , I formed a line in rear of the center of my position , covering the entrance to a road leading to the ...
Page 42
... morning of the 14th Brigadier- General Marston , with three regiments of his brigade and the Thirty - ninth Illinois of my division , reported to me . During the night of the 13th heavy skirmishing took place on the railroad at the foot ...
... morning of the 14th Brigadier- General Marston , with three regiments of his brigade and the Thirty - ninth Illinois of my division , reported to me . During the night of the 13th heavy skirmishing took place on the railroad at the foot ...
Page 46
... morning of the 10th , having ascertained from colored peo- ple that the enemy were coming down upon me in considerable force , I made additional arrangements to give them a warm and effectual reception ; got my pieces in position ...
... morning of the 10th , having ascertained from colored peo- ple that the enemy were coming down upon me in considerable force , I made additional arrangements to give them a warm and effectual reception ; got my pieces in position ...
Page 48
... morning of the 14th instant the Thirty - ninth Regiment Illinois Volunteers was ordered to accom- pany a supply train to Half - Way , a station on the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad , where we arrived about noon . Colonel Os- born ...
... morning of the 14th instant the Thirty - ninth Regiment Illinois Volunteers was ordered to accom- pany a supply train to Half - Way , a station on the Richmond and Petersburg Railroad , where we arrived about noon . Colonel Os- born ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. A. HUMPHREYS advance Aide-de-Camp ammunition artillery Assistant Adjutant-General attack battery Belle Plain Bermuda Hundred bridge Brig brigade Brigadier-General camp Capt Captain cavalry Chief of Staff City Point Colonel Comdg command of Major-General companies Creek dispatch Drewry's Bluff Eighteenth Army enemy enemy's FIFTH ARMY CORPS Fifth Corps fire flank force Fort Monroe Fredericksburg front G. K. WARREN HDQRS HEADQUARTERS ARMY honor infantry intrenchments James River Lieut Lieutenant-Colonel Lieutenant-General Lieutenant-General GRANT line of battle Major-General and Chief Major-General BURNSIDE major-general commanding directs Major-General HANCOCK Major-General HUMPHREYS Major-General Meade Major-General WARREN miles morning move NINTH ARMY North Carolina obedient servant officers ordered p. m. Major-General Petersburg picket-line pickets plank road position POTOMAC Q. A. GILLMORE railroad rear rebel received regiment respectfully Richmond SECOND CORPS sent Sixth Corps skirmishers Spotsylvania Court-House Station TENTH ARMY CORPS to-morrow trains troops turnpike U. S. GRANT Volunteers wagons WINF'D wounded