Your search returned 256 results in 124 document sections:

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22,275BoydDec. 14, 1858. 24,003BoydMay 17, 1859. 25,084BarnesAug. 16, 1859. 25,381BuellSept. 13, 1859. (Reissue.)8723SangsterMar. 23, 1858. 20,684SnowJune 22, 1858. 20,688BarnesJune 29, 1858. 21,299JacksonAug. 24, 1858. (Reissue.)thAug. 10, 1859. 25,730Grover et al.Oct. 11, 1859. 25,876BarnesOct. 25, 1859. 25,913RobertsonOct. 25, 1859. 25,963Fosket28BarclayAug. 25, 1868. 83,406PorterOct. 27, 1868. 85,633BarnesJan. 5, 1869. 86,163JonesJan. 26, 1869. 86,164JonesJan. 26,032CoonAug. 2, 1870. 106,249BennorAug. 9, 1870. 106,307BarnesAug. 16, 1870. 107,041HarlowSept. 6, 1870. 108,020HarperOpr. 14, 1874. 150,668Allerton et al.May 12, 1874. 158,565BarnesJan. 12, 1875. 158,744SchneiderJan. 12, 1875. 12. Quill5, 1871. 121,638Manson (Reissue.)Dec. 5, 1871. 121,745BarnesDec. 12, 1871. 124,812GreerMar. 19, 1872. 126,421SquierMaAdm. Smyth. London, 1867. Shipbuilding, by Rankine, Watts, Barnes, and Napier. Wiley & Sons. New York. In Plate LIX., t
Frederick H. Dyer, Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Regimental Histories, Massachusetts Volunteers. (search)
ttached to 3rd Massachusetts Militia Infantry as Company D. Doten's Company, Plymouth Rock Guards, organized May 6, 1861. Moved to Fortress Monroe, Va., May 19-21. Mustered in for three years May 22, 1861, and attached to 3rd Massachusetts Militia Infantry as Company E. Chamberlin's Company, Union Guards, organized April 18, 1861. Moved to Fortress Monroe, Va., May 19-23. Mustered in for three years May 14, 1861, and assigned to 3rd Massachusetts Militia Infantry as Company I. Barnes' Company, Greenough Guards, organized April 25, 1861. Moved to Fortress Monroe, Va., May 19-21. Mustered in for three years May 22 and attached to 4th Massachusetts Militia Infantry as Company K. Battalion organized at Fort Monroe, Va., July, 1861. Company M, 4th Militia, designated as Rifles; Company M, 3rd Militia, designated as M : Company L. 4th Militia, designated as L ; Company D, 3rd Militia. designated as D : Company E. 4th Militia, designated as E ; Company I, 4th Milit
Emilio, Luis F., History of the Fifty-Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry , 1863-1865, Roster of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Infantry. (search)
y 63 James Id. S. C. $50. Wright, William 22, sin.; laborer; Carlisle, Pa. 15 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Company I. Asbury, Thomas. 25, mar.; cook; Dayton, O. 23 Apl 63; 19 Sep 65 Boston. $50. Ashport, Lemuel A. 18, sin.; farmer; So. Bridgewater. 16 Dec 63; 20 Aug 65. $325. Atlee, Abner 25, sin.; farmer; Morristown, Pa. 22 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Augustus, Charles Corpl. 30, mar; blacksmith; Ypsilanti, Mich. 23 Apl 63, missing 18 Jly 63 Ft. Wagner; supposed died pris. $50. Barnes, William 20, sin., laborer; Mercersburg, Pa. 22 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Mercersburg, Pa. Bass, John 20, sin.; laborer; Columbus, O. 28 Apl 63; 22 Aug 63 Morris Id. S. C; dis. $50. Beatty, Jones. 20, sin.; laborer; Lanesville, O. 28 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Bell, Nathaniel 23, mar.; laborer; Carlisle, Pa. 22 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Bell, William 21, sin.; brickmaker; Carlisle, Pa. 22 Apl 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Betenbough, Andrew H. 23, mar.; carpenter; Hamilton, O. 13 May 63; 20 A
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Book and heart: essays on literature and life, Chapter 32: the disappearance of ennui (search)
ney as for sheer love of the game. He stays near the city, and does not, like the Englishman, become a landed proprietor and buy an estate in the country a dozen miles from any other estate. As with the old, so with the young. The young clubmen of our cities are not simply swells, like their London prototypes; they must be bankers and speculators also. Pelham and Vivian Grey and the Count d'orsay have ceased to be prototypes; Barnes Newcome is the ideal. The American Van Bibber and Mr. Barnes of New York are merely far-off copies of him. To be sure, Thackeray says, I do not know what there was about this young gentleman which inspired every one of his own sex with a strong desire to kick him, but it is very certain that he was not kicked for yielding to ennui. As to the other sex, we have the assurance of the highest living authority that in New York, at least, unless a fashionable woman attends the opera three times a week, dines out seven days in the week, lunches daily at o
Charles E. Stowe, Harriet Beecher Stowe compiled from her letters and journals by her son Charles Edward Stowe, Chapter 6: removal to Brunswick, 1850-1852. (search)
found to be professors of religion in some of the various Christian denominations. This fact has given to the church great weight in this country — the general and predominant spirit of intelligence and probity and piety of its majority has given it that degree of weight that it has the power to decide the great moral questions of the day. Whatever it unitedly and decidedly sets itself against as moral evil it can put down. In this sense the church is responsible for the sin of slavery. Dr. Barnes has beautifully and briefly expressed this on the last page of his work on slavery, when he says: Not all the force out of the church could sustain slavery an hour if it were not sustained in it. It then appears that the church has the power to put an end to this evil and does not do it. In this sense she may be said to be pro-slavery. But the church has the same power over intemperance, and Sabbath-breaking, and sin of all kinds. There is not a doubt that if the moral power of the chur
C. Edwards Lester, Life and public services of Charles Sumner: Born Jan. 6, 1811. Died March 11, 1874., Section Eleventh: his death, and public honors to his memory. (search)
It is proper to state that during all his illness, Dr. Johnson has merely acted under the advice of Dr. Brown-Sequard, only administering the prescriptions of that physician, who thoroughly understood Mr. Sumner's case. Towards morning the Senator grew worse, his symptoms became more alarming, and he began to lose strength rapidly. About six o'clock, Mr. Wormley, Mr. Hooper, Mr. Pierce, and other friends arrived, and it was at once decided to have a consultation of physicians. Surgeon-General Barnes, Dr. Lincoln, and Dr. W. P. Johnson were summoned, and were soon in attendance. The result of the consultation was the opinion that Mr. Sumner could scarcely survive. At the Senator's request, Mr. Wormley telegraphed to New York for Dr. Brown-Sequard, to Philadelphia for Colonel J. W. Forney, and other intimate personal friends. Those around his bedside are of the opinion that, at this time, Mr. Sumner filly realized the dangerous character of his condition. Everything was done b
It is proper to state that during all his illness, Dr. Johnson has merely acted under the advice of Dr. Brown-Sequard, only administering the prescriptions of that physician, who thoroughly understood Mr. Sumner's case. Towards morning the Senator grew worse, his symptoms became more alarming, and he began to lose strength rapidly. About six o'clock, Mr. Wormley, Mr. Hooper, Mr. Pierce, and other friends arrived, and it was at once decided to have a consultation of physicians. Surgeon-General Barnes, Dr. Lincoln, and Dr. W. P. Johnson were summoned, and were soon in attendance. The result of the consultation was the opinion that Mr. Sumner could scarcely survive. At the Senator's request, Mr. Wormley telegraphed to New York for Dr. Brown-Sequard, to Philadelphia for Colonel J. W. Forney, and other intimate personal friends. Those around his bedside are of the opinion that, at this time, Mr. Sumner filly realized the dangerous character of his condition. Everything was done b
Cambridge History of American Literature: volume 1, Colonial and Revolutionary Literature: Early National Literature: Part I (ed. Trent, William Peterfield, 1862-1939., Erskine, John, 1879-1951., Sherman, Stuart Pratt, 1881-1926., Van Doren, Carl, 1885-1950.), Chapter 2: the early drama, 1756-1860 (search)
elphia had been the theatrical metropolis. Then the growing importance of the port of New York brought an increasing number of foreign actors to that city and made it important for an actor to begin his career there. The year 1825-6, according to Ireland,2 was remarkable in the history of the New York stage, since it witnessed the first attempt to establish Italian opera with a fully organized company, the beginning of Hackett's career as a comedian, and the combination of Placide, Hilson, Barnes, and Miss Kelly in comedy at the Park Theatre. Most important, this year marked the real beginning of Edwin Forrest's career, both in Philadelphia and in New York. The very prominence of New York and its proximity to Europe, however much they added to its theatrical prestige, hindered the development of the drama. The succession of English actors who were brought over as stars resulted in little encouragement to native writers, while in Philadelphia, under the encouragement of Edwin For
Cambridge History of American Literature: volume 1, Colonial and Revolutionary Literature: Early National Literature: Part I (ed. Trent, William Peterfield, 1862-1939., Erskine, John, 1879-1951., Sherman, Stuart Pratt, 1881-1926., Van Doren, Carl, 1885-1950.), Index. (search)
91, 94 n., 161 Autumnal reflections, 238 B Backwoodsman, the, 238-239, 279 Bacon, Lord, 82, I 10, I 16 Bacon, Nathaniel, 24, 150 Bailey, John J., 224 Baker, Benjamin A., 229 Ballad of reading gaol, the, 264 Baltimore Company, 218 Baltimore Company, Lord, 18 Bancroft, George, 332 Banks, Joseph, 91, 193 Barbe-Marbois, Marquis de, 201 Barclay, Robert, I16 Barker, James N., 220, 224, 225, 227 Barlow, Joel, 164, 169-171, 174, 261 Barnard, John, 156 Barnes, 221 Barrett, Lawrence, 223 Barrow, Robert, 8 Bartram, John, 194-195, 201 Bartram, William, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191,192, 194, 195-198,212,213 Batchelor's Hall, 161 Byteman, Mrs. Sidney F., 230 Battle of Brooklyn, the, 218 Battle of Lovell's Pond, the, 166 Battle of the kegs, 167 Baviad, 178 Bay Psalm Book, the, 156 Beattie, William, 163 Beauchamp, Colonel, 224 Beauchampe, 225 n., 317 Beauties of Santa Cruz, the, 181 Beaux-Stratagem, the, 117 Beer
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 8 (search)
ery party had been soon shamed out of the attempt to drag the Bible into their service, and hence the discussion there had been short and somewhat superficial. The pro-slavery side of the question has been eagerly sustained by theological reviews and doctors of divinity without number, from the half-way and timid faltering of Wayland up to the unblushing and melancholy recklessness of Stuart. The argument on the other side has come wholly from the Abolitionists; for neither Dr. Hague nor Dr. Barnes can be said to have added anything to the wide research, critical acumen, and comprehensive views of Theodore D. Weld, Beriah Green, J. G. Fee, and the old work of Duncan. On the constitutional questions which have at various times arisen,--the citizenship of the colored man, the soundness of the Prigg decision, the constitutionality of the old Fugitive Slave Law, the true construction of the slave-surrender clause,--nothing has been added, either in the way of fact or argument, to the
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