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, 1883 - 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 10
... wounded and prisoners as soon as he had left the Congress , without reporting to me . The Congress , having been set on fire by our hot shot and incendiary shell , continued to burn , her loaded guns being successively discharged as the ...
... wounded and prisoners as soon as he had left the Congress , without reporting to me . The Congress , having been set on fire by our hot shot and incendiary shell , continued to burn , her loaded guns being successively discharged as the ...
Page 71
... wounded , will be considered as having been derelict to the highest duty , and will be punished accordingly . The excuse sometimes given that men have left the field to carry off the wounded is inadmissible , as no man will be permitted ...
... wounded , will be considered as having been derelict to the highest duty , and will be punished accordingly . The excuse sometimes given that men have left the field to carry off the wounded is inadmissible , as no man will be permitted ...
Page 74
... wounded and has since died . The whole work was finished on the afternoon of the 8th instant , after a hard day's fighting , by a brilliant charge on the battery in the center of the island and a rapid pursuit of the enemy to the north ...
... wounded and has since died . The whole work was finished on the afternoon of the 8th instant , after a hard day's fighting , by a brilliant charge on the battery in the center of the island and a rapid pursuit of the enemy to the north ...
Page 83
... wounded of your corimand consequent upon the attack upon Roanoke Island : February 7 a small boat , having been ordered on shore to recon- noiter , was attacked by the enemy , when Charles Viall , a private in Company E , of the Fifth ...
... wounded of your corimand consequent upon the attack upon Roanoke Island : February 7 a small boat , having been ordered on shore to recon- noiter , was attacked by the enemy , when Charles Viall , a private in Company E , of the Fifth ...
Page 84
... wounded not provided for . During the action of this day 32 were killed and 174 wounded . * Col. Charles L. Russell , of the Tenth Connecticut Volun- teers , was shot through the lung , and died almost immediately . Lieut . Col. Viguer ...
... wounded not provided for . During the action of this day 32 were killed and 174 wounded . * Col. Charles L. Russell , of the Tenth Connecticut Volun- teers , was shot through the lung , and died almost immediately . Lieut . Col. Viguer ...
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Common terms and phrases
advance AMBROSE E ammunition arrived artillery Assistant Adjutant-General attack battery battle Beaufort Berne boats breastworks bridge Brig brigade Brigadier-General Burnside camp Capt Captain cavalry charge Colonel Shaw companies Creek Croatan Sound defense DEPARTMENT OF NORFOLK Department of North dispatch duty Elizabeth City enemy enemy's February fire flank fleet force Fort Monroe Fort Thompson Foster Fourth Rhode Island Goldsborough guard gunboats guns HDQRS HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT howitzers Huger immediately Infantry instant J. P. BENJAMIN James River killed Kinston landing Legion Lieut Lieutenant Lieutenant-Colonel Major-General March March 14 Massachusetts Merrimac miles morning Nag's Head Navy night Ninth New York Norfolk North Carolina o'clock obedient servant officers ordered pickets position railroad re-enforcements rear rebel received regiment Reno respectfully retreat returned Rhode Island Richmond road Roanoke Island Secretary Secretary of War sent shell shot soon steamer transportation troops Twenty-first Massachusetts U. S. Army vessels Virginia Volunteers Wise wounded Yorktown