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Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 1. 4 0 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 1.. You can also browse the collection for Edgar W. Charles or search for Edgar W. Charles in all documents.

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Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 1., Chapter 4: seditious movements in Congress.--Secession in South Carolina, and its effects. (search)
oung.Ephraim M. Clark.John Julius Pringle Smith.R. C. Logan. W. Pinckney Shingler.H. W. Garlington.Alex. H. Brown.Isaac W. Hayne.Francis S. Parker. Peter P. Bonneau.John D. Williams.E. S. P. Bellinger.Jn. H. Honour.Benj. Faneuil Duncan. John P. Richardson.W. D. Watts.Merrick E. Carn.Richard De Treville.Samuel Taylor Atkinson. John L. Manning.Thos. Wier.E. R. Henderson.Thomas M. Hanckel.Alex. M. Forster. John I. Ingram.H. I. Caughman.Peter Stokes.A. W. Burnet.Wm. Blackburn Wilson. Edgar W. Charles.John C. Geiger.Daniel Flud.Thomas Y. Simons.Robert T. Allison. Julius A. Dargan.Paul Quattlebaum.David C. Appleby.Artemas T. Darby.Samuel Rainey. Isaac D. Wilson.W. B. Rowell.R. W. Barnwell.L. W. Spratt.A. Baxter Springs. John M. Timmons.Chesley D. Evans.Jos. Dan'l Pope.Williams Middleton.A. I. Barron. Francis Hugh Wardlaw.Wm. W. Harllee.C. P. Brown.F. D. Richardson.  Attest, Benjamin F. Arthur, Clerk of the Convention. the President of the Convention (Jamison) stepped forward
Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 1., Chapter 20: commencement of civil War. (search)
om the Virginia end of the Bridge. These were immediately followed by the constitutional Guards of the District of Columbia under Captain Digges, who advanced about four miles on the road toward Alexandria. At two o'clock in the morning, a heavy body, composed of the New York Seventh Regiment; three New Jersey regiments (Second, Third, and Fourth), under Brigadier-General Theodore Runyon, and the New York Twelfth and twenty-fifth, passed over. The New York troops were commanded by Major-General Charles W. Theodore Runyon. Sandford, who, at the call of the President, had offered his entire division to the service of the country. the New York Seventh Regiment was halted at the end of the long Bridge. One New Jersey Regiment took post at Roach's Spring, near which a redoubt was cast up, and named Fort Runyon, in honor of the commanding General under whose direction it was constructed. It crossed the road leading from the long, Bridge to Alexandria, near its junction with t