The War of the Rebellion: v. 1-8 [serial no. 114-121] Correspondence, orders, reports and returns, Union and Confederate, relating to prisoners of war and to state or political prisoners. 1894 [i.e. 1898]-1899. 8 vU.S. Government Printing Office, 1899 - 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 1
... lines is capable both of dis- criminating between different ions and of enhancing the visibility of nebulae by suppressing stellar images and the quasi- continuous sky background in favor of the chosen band pass . In the Palomar Sky ...
... lines is capable both of dis- criminating between different ions and of enhancing the visibility of nebulae by suppressing stellar images and the quasi- continuous sky background in favor of the chosen band pass . In the Palomar Sky ...
Page 3
... LINES 5,894,529 POST LED Globe by Over Half a Million Lines 5,351,330 POST LED American by Over Nine Hundred Thousand Lines 4,986,569 POST LED Herald by Nearly 3,406,513 Two and a Half Million Lines These comparisons are confined to ...
... LINES 5,894,529 POST LED Globe by Over Half a Million Lines 5,351,330 POST LED American by Over Nine Hundred Thousand Lines 4,986,569 POST LED Herald by Nearly 3,406,513 Two and a Half Million Lines These comparisons are confined to ...
Page 3
... lines. Because overhead transmission lines are constructed over open areas where it is not possible to isolate them from the general public by fencing, it is very important that certain safety rules be observed in the construction and ...
... lines. Because overhead transmission lines are constructed over open areas where it is not possible to isolate them from the general public by fencing, it is very important that certain safety rules be observed in the construction and ...
Page 3
... line is cut , the system does nothing . ( RT 129 , lines 26-28 through RT 130 , lines 1-6 . ) An expert witness testified that his practice is to install an " autopole device " , such as a polar siren , in such a system , because that ...
... line is cut , the system does nothing . ( RT 129 , lines 26-28 through RT 130 , lines 1-6 . ) An expert witness testified that his practice is to install an " autopole device " , such as a polar siren , in such a system , because that ...
Page 2
... lines, which 'almost always involves exploitation of vulnerable persons' and the 'essential feature' of 'mobile phone lines', has hardly changed at all in years since ( NCA, 2015 : 1). Such consistency is rare in social science: either ...
... lines, which 'almost always involves exploitation of vulnerable persons' and the 'essential feature' of 'mobile phone lines', has hardly changed at all in years since ( NCA, 2015 : 1). Such consistency is rare in social science: either ...
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Common terms and phrases
ADJUTANT-GENERAL'S OFFICE arrested Assistant Adjutant-General August authority Brig Brigadier-General Camp Butler Camp Chase Camp Douglas Capt Captain captured cartel Cavalry charge citizens Colonel Third Infantry commanding officer Commissary-General of Prisoners Confederate confined Detroit duty E. M. STANTON enemy exchange of prisoners flag of truce Fort Delaware Fort Lafayette Fort Monroe furnished G. W. RANDOLPH Government Governor guard HALLECK HDQRS HEADQUARTERS ARMY HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT honor inclose Inclosure indorsement instant instructions John July July 12 June letter Lieutenant Major-General MCCLELLAN Missouri Monroe oath of allegiance obedient servant October OFFICE COMMISSARY-GENERAL Ohio parole paroled prisoners Pennsylvania Volunteers persons prisoners of war provost-marshal Provost-Marshal-General quartermaster rebel received Regiment released respectfully Richmond Saint Louis Second Lieut Secretary Secretary of War sent September soldiers surgeon take the oath taken Tennessee THOMAS troops U. S. Army Vicksburg Virginia WAR DEPARTMENT Washington WILLIAM HOFFMAN York Volunteers