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Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War., Chapter 59: (search)
56 Springfield   Alfred Robb. Steamer Boston. 23,036 03 2,308 49 20,727 54 Boston. Oct. 10, 1864 Fort Jackson. Steamer Banshee 111,216 65 6,268 17 104,948 48 New York Oct. 25, 1864 Fulton, Grand Gulf. Sloop Buffalo. 13,328 85 2,416 37 10,912 48 Philadelphia Nov. 23, 1864 Braziliera. Boat and cargo 390 25 201 78 188 47 New Orleans Feb. 2, 1865 Tallahatchie. Boats, 2, and 4 bales of cotton 2,700 00 261 45 2,438 55 do Mar. 27, 1865 Commodore. Steamer Bloomer     1,700 00 do Oct. 3, 1865 Potomac. Schooner Belle 26,586 74 3,430 19 23,156 25 do April 20, 1865 Virginia. Steamer Blenheim 55,778 22 3,655 77 52,122 45 New York June 19, 1865 Tristam Shandy, Lillian, Britannia, Osceola, Gettysburg. Schooner Badger 10,824 32 947 89 9,886 43 Key West June 29, 1865 Adela. Boat and sundries 194 22 90 82 103 40 do   San Jacinto. (Waiting for prize list.) Boat, no name 891 67 123 61 768 06 do Aug. 16, 1865 Ino. Schooner Baigorry 61,568 43 4,315 65 57,272 58 do Aug. 1
W HoodNov. 8, 1864. 45,176H. ReynoldsNov. 22, 1864. †45,912W. C. DodgeJan. 17, 1865. †45,983W. C. DodgeJan. 24, 1865. 1. (b.) Behind a Barrel; Cylinder charged at Rear.—Continued. No.Name.Date. 46,023R. H. PlassJan. 24, 1865. †46,225W. H. ElliotFeb. 7, 1865. 46,243B. F. JoslynFeb. 7, 1865. 46,562P. HaughainFeb. 28, 1865. 47,252A. GuerriereApr. 11, 1865. 47,775J. H. VickersMay 16, 1865. 48,287B. F. JoslynJune 20, 1865. †48,775L. C. RodierJuly 11, 1865. 50,224S. CrispinOct. 3, 1865. 51,092Smith and WessonNov. 21, 1865. †51,117W. MasonNov. 21, 1865. 51,269J. RiderNov. 28, 1865. 51,836B. F. JoslynJan. 2, 1866. †51,985E. WhitneyJan. 9, 1866. †52,165H. HammondJan. 23, 1866. 52,248H. S. JoselynJan. 23, 1866. 52,582B. T. LoomisFeb. 13, 1866. 53,539W. MasonMar. 27, 1866. †53,648P. PolainMar. 27, 1866. †53,881S. H. RoperApr. 10, 1866. †54,065J. B. DoolittleApr. 17, 1866. 57,864A. ChristSept. 11, 1866. 59,629A. L. MunsonNov. 13, 1866. 63,450R. W
. 7, 1858. (Reissue.)1,073TylerNov. 13, 1861. 48,007WittnebenMay 30, 1865. 50,297BallouOct. 3, 1865. 83,398MeyersOct. 27, 1868. 96,017LomaxOct. 19, 1869. 107,677GodownSept. 27, 1870. 117,2027HumphreyAug. 29, 1865. 49,745FreySept. 5, 1865. 49,803TarboxSept. 5, 1865. 50,253HumphreyOct. 3, 1865. 50,299CajarOct. 3, 1865. 50,870BartramNov. 7, 1865. 51,086RehfussNov. 21, 1865. 54,671BaOct. 3, 1865. 50,870BartramNov. 7, 1865. 51,086RehfussNov. 21, 1865. 54,671BartramMay 15, 1866. (Reissue.)2,245BartramMay 15, 1866. 55,688McCloskeyJune 19, 1866. 55,863HouseJune 26, 1866. 55,864HouseJune 26, 1866. 55,865HouseJune 26, 1866. 55,866HouseJune 26, 1866. rosby et al.Dec. 2, 1862. 37,550PipoJan. 27, 1863. 46,424RobjohnFeb. 14, 1865. 50,225CrosbyOct. 3, 1865. 50,473HechtOct. 17, 1865. 58,376CaryOct. 2, 1866. 89,085ScharffeApr. 20, 1869. 93,063Dav34,357FishFeb. 11, 1861. 40,084RoseSept. 22, 1863. 46,871BoltonMar. 21, 1865. 50,271PerrettOct. 3, 1865. 52,918WestFeb. 27, 1866. 60,111YaleNov. 27, 1866. 61,618GoodrichJan. 29, 1867. 63,033Ful
er-December. Columbia, Duck River, November 24-27. Battle of Franklin November 30. Battle of Nashville December 15-16. Pursuit of Hood to the Tennessee River December 17-28. Moved to Huntsville, Ala., and duty there till March, 1865. Operations in East Tennessee March 15-April 22. Duty at Nashville, Tenn., till June. Ordered to New Orleans, La., June 16, thence to Texas. Duty at Indianola, Green Lake and Victoria, Texas, to October. Mustered out at Victoria October 3, 1865. Discharged at Columbus, Ohio, November 3, 1865. Regiment lost during service 4 Officers and 108 Enlisted men killed and mortally wounded and 1 Officer and 233 Enlisted men by disease. Total 346. 52nd Ohio Regiment Infantry. Organized at Camp Dennison, Ohio, August, 1862. Left State for Lexington, Ky., August 25. Attached to 36th Brigade, 11th Division, Army of the Ohio, to October, 1862. 36th Brigade, 11th Division, 3rd Army Corps, Army of the Ohio, to November, 1
Frederick H. Dyer, Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Regimental Histories, United States Veteran Reserve Corps. (search)
United States Veteran Reserve Company, 1st Battalion Organized at Knoxville, Tenn., February 7, 1865. Mustered out by detachments July 12 to November 27, 1865. 245th United States Veteran Reserve Company, 1st Battalion Organized at Knoxville, Tenn., February 24, 1865. Mustered out by detachments July 12 to November 27, 1865. 246th United States Veteran Reserve Company, 1st Battalion Organized at St. Albans, Vt., April, 1865. Mustered out by detachments July 8 to October 3, 1865. 1st United States Veteran Reserve Company, 2nd Battalion Formerly known as Company G, 3rd Regiment, Veteran Reserve Corps. Organized at Convalescent Camp, Va., June 9, 1863. Designation changed to 1st Company, 2nd Battalion, May 20, 1864. Consolidated with 14th Company, 2nd Battalion, August 7, 1865. 2nd United States Veteran Reserve Company, 2nd Battalion Formerly known as Company G, 11th Regiment, Veteran Reserve Corps. Organized at Washington, D. C., July 1, 1863
Oliver Otis Howard, Autobiography of Oliver Otis Howard, major general , United States army : volume 2, Chapter 59: institutions of the higher grade; the Barry Farm (search)
College, located at Nashville, Tenn., and founded by the Methodist Freedmen's Aid Society, had in 1870 92 scholars and 5 teachers. It had risen in 1896 to a total of 165 scholars, all in professional courses. The first building used by this college was a Confederate gun factory. 8. Fisk University had its beginning in the thought and plan of E. P. Smith and E. M. Cravath, who were both at the time secretaries of the American Missionary Association. They met at Nashville, Tenn., October 3, 1865, and had a conference on the subject of making Nashville an educational center for the then newly emancipated and their descendants. This conference soon took into its councils General C. B. Fisk, commissioner, and Prof. John Ogden, an able educator who had been an officer of the army during the war. A half square of land was purchased, and by General Fisk's solicitation a number of temporary hospital structures which were on the land were by the Government assigned to the use of the p
two thousand. They are as follows:— New England Lodge, No. 4, instituted July 21, 1827, 274 members; Friendship Lodge, No. 20, instituted September 26, 1843, 365 members; Mount Auburn Lodge, No. 94, instituted October 15, 1845, 113 members; Cambridge Lodge, No. 13, instituted September 2, 1874, 240 members; Mount Sinai Lodge, No. 169, instituted September 23, 1874, 205 members; Dunster Lodge, No. 220, instituted July 11, 1893, 184 members; New England Encampment, No. 34, instituted October 3, 1865, 149 members; Charles River Encampment, No. 22, instituted September 1, 1846, 176 members; Olive Branch Rebekah Lodge, No. 21, instituted March 13, 1874, 143 members; Amity Rebekah Lodge, No. 15, instituted June 29, 1871, 189 members. Friendship Lodge celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1893 at Union Hall, which was one of the most elaborate and largely attended celebrations of any organization in the history of our city. Two large and handsome buildings, one in Cambridgeport,
Lucius R. Paige, History of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1630-1877, with a genealogical register, Chapter 16: ecclesiastical History. (search)
1858, and resigned July 12, 1861. After a series of discouragements, by advice of a council, the church was disbanded Oct. 3, 1865, and many of its members united with the Pilgrim Church, then worshipping in Stearns Chapel on Harvard Street, to whic Willard SearsJan. 8, 1855Dismissed1857 George W. WyattSept. 18, 1857ResignedJune 8, 1860 Lyman G. CaseSept. 18, 1857Oct. 3, 1865 Curtis C. Nichols Sept. 18, 1857Oct. 3, 1865 Baxter E. PerryFeb. 6, 1860ResignedJan. 14, 1861 Edward KendallJan. 14Oct. 3, 1865 Baxter E. PerryFeb. 6, 1860ResignedJan. 14, 1861 Edward KendallJan. 14, 1861Oct. 3, 1865 The four deacons who were dismissed had previously removed from the city. Evangelical, East Cambiidge.—The Evangelical Church at East Cambridge was organized Sept. 8, 1842. In the course of the next year a meeting-house wasOct. 3, 1865 The four deacons who were dismissed had previously removed from the city. Evangelical, East Cambiidge.—The Evangelical Church at East Cambridge was organized Sept. 8, 1842. In the course of the next year a meeting-house was erected at the northeasterly corner of Second and Thorndike streets, which was dedicated Sept. 13, 1843, and taken down for removal to Somerville in 1876. The first pastor of the church was Rev. Frederick T. Perkins, Y. C. 1839, who was ordained Ja
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, I. List of officers from Massachusetts in United States Navy, 1861 to 1865. (search)
.Feb. 3, 1864.Actg. Asst. Paymr.Selma.West Gulf.Oct. 3, 1865.Mustered out.Actg. Asst. Paymr. Clapp Harvey,M. 15, 1864.Actg. Master's Mate.Genesee.West Gulf.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Master's Mate. Foster, Jo.Actg. Master's Mate.Rhode Island.North Atlantic.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Mate. Gardner, Charles F.,Mass.1863.Actg. Asst. Paymr.Silver Cloud.Mississippi.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Asst. Paymr. Hathorne, Wational Guard; OnondagaWest Gulf; North Atlantic.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Master. Hazard, Andrew R.1864.Actg. Asst. Paymr.Dunbarton.North Atlantic.Oct. 3, 1865.Mustered out.Actg. Asst. Paymr. Holmes, Philan, 1864.Actg. Asst. Paymr.Gemsbok.South Atlantic.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Asst. Paymr. Semple, JohAug. 12, 1861.Actg. Master.Young Rover.East Gulf.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Master. Sturges, Henry L.an. 9, 1863.Actg. Ensipn.San Jacinto.West India.Oct. 3, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. Master. Jan. 4, 1865.Actg
Born in Massachusetts. Captain, 3d Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., May 6, 1861. Mustered out, July 22, 1861. Lieut. Colonel, 18th Mass. Infantry, July 26, 1861. Colonel, 39th Mass. Infantry, Aug. 18, 1862. Transferred to 38th Mass. Infantry, Aug. 18, 1862. Served in Louisiana under General Banks. Engaged in the Teche campaign in the spring of 1863. Provost Marshal at Washington, D. C., Sept., 1863. Brevet Brig. General, U. S. Volunteers, Oct. 2, 1865. Mustered out, Oct. 3, 1865. Died at Boston Highlands, Feb. 26, 1876. Jackson, Nathaniel James. Born at Newburyport, Mass., about 1825. Colonel, 1st Me. Infantry, May 3, 1861. Mustered out, Aug. 5, 1861. Colonel, 5th Me. Infantry, Sept. 3, 1861. Brig. General, U. S. Volunteers, Sept. 24, 1862. Served through the campaigns of McClellan and Pope in Virginia, being wounded at Gaines's Mill; in command of 1st division 20th Army Corps in the autumn of 1864, taking part in Sherman's march to the sea and in the
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