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, 1890 - 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 29
... received orders to re- turn last evening . The commanding officer of the provost guard stated to the gentleman at whose house he staid that they were re- turning to Eastport to take transports , and that the Tennessee and Cumberland ...
... received orders to re- turn last evening . The commanding officer of the provost guard stated to the gentleman at whose house he staid that they were re- turning to Eastport to take transports , and that the Tennessee and Cumberland ...
Page 41
... ( Received 3 p . m . , 29th . ) Hooker reached Brown's Ferry to - day about 3 p . m . Met with no serious opposition . The enemy still hold Lookout Mountain in con- siderable force . The wagon road is now open to Bridgeport . We have ...
... ( Received 3 p . m . , 29th . ) Hooker reached Brown's Ferry to - day about 3 p . m . Met with no serious opposition . The enemy still hold Lookout Mountain in con- siderable force . The wagon road is now open to Bridgeport . We have ...
Page 82
... received from headquarters and from General Hooker to cross the river at Shellmound and join General Hooker . This we did , and encamped that night at Shellmound , on the south side of the river . On the 30th , we waited until the boat ...
... received from headquarters and from General Hooker to cross the river at Shellmound and join General Hooker . This we did , and encamped that night at Shellmound , on the south side of the river . On the 30th , we waited until the boat ...
Page 100
... received a musket ball in the head , which entered posteriorly , carrying away a large fragment of the left parietal bone and much of the corre- sponding lobe of the brain . The man was senseless , but groaning piteously . He was laid ...
... received a musket ball in the head , which entered posteriorly , carrying away a large fragment of the left parietal bone and much of the corre- sponding lobe of the brain . The man was senseless , but groaning piteously . He was laid ...
Page 131
... received orders from Brigadier - General Greene to go and bivouac on the right of the One hundred and forty - ninth New York Vol- unteers , the regiment in two lines , one behind the other . At about 10.30 o'clock I was startled by ...
... received orders from Brigadier - General Greene to go and bivouac on the right of the One hundred and forty - ninth New York Vol- unteers , the regiment in two lines , one behind the other . At about 10.30 o'clock I was startled by ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance Answer Army Corps arrived artillery assault Assistant Adjutant-General attack battery Bean's Station boats bridge Bridgeport Brig Brigadier-General Brown's Ferry Burnside camp Capt Captain captured cavalry Chattanooga Collierville Colonel Hecker column command companies Cross-Roads crossed Cumberland December direction dispatch East Tennessee Eastport enemy enemy's engaged fire flank force forward front Geary guns halted HDQRS HEADQUARTERS hill Holston honor Hooker horses Illinois Indiana JAMES LONGSTREET JOSEPH HOOKER Kentucky killed Knoxville Lenoir's Lieut Lieutenant Lieutenant-Colonel line of battle Longstreet Loudon Major-General manding Michigan miles morning Morristown Mossy Creek Mountain move night November obedient servant occupied October 27 officers Ohio ordered pickets position prisoners railroad re-enforcements rear rebels received regiment respectfully road Rogersville Schurz scouts Second Brigade Second Division sent Shellmound Sherman SIXTEENTH ARMY skirmishers south side Strawberry Plains Tenn Third Brigade troops Tuscumbia Twelfth Corps U. S. Army Volunteer Infantry wagons Wauhatchie wounded