Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for Pease or search for Pease in all documents.

Your search returned 1 result in 4 document sections:

The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Black Republican on the Vienna fight (search)
e fight near Vienna is still the talk of the camp. The men are all very emphatic in praising Gen. Schenck and Col. McCook for their coolness and bravery, after they were fired upon. Col. McCook took immediate direction of the men, and they say they heard his voice above everything else telling exactly what to do. Gen. Schenck was fired at by a sharp shooter just as he stepped from the cars, and the step probably saved his life, as the ball passed close over his head and pierced the car. Capt. Pease is generally praised for his conduct under fire. He took hold of two or three men and thrust them into the ranks, while the six-pounders were going it. While he had one man by the shoulder putting him in his place, a grape shot passed between them. Officers and men cannot be too highly praised for the style in which they retreated in the face of a vastly superior force. Nothing but the extraordinary steadiness of our men prevented them from being entirely cut off. A farmer from th
The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Black Republican on the Vienna fight (search)
e fight near Vienna is still the talk of the camp. The men are all very emphatic in praising Gen. Schenck and Col. McCook for their coolness and bravery, after they were fired upon. Col. McCook took immediate direction of the men, and they say they heard his voice above everything else telling exactly what to do. Gen. Schenck was fired at by a sharp shooter just as he stepped from the cars, and the step probably saved his life, as the ball passed close over his head and pierced the car. Capt. Pease is generally praised for his conduct under fire. He took hold of two or three men and thrust them into the ranks, while the six-pounders were going it. While he had one man by the shoulder putting him in his place, a grape shot passed between them. Officers and men cannot be too highly praised for the style in which they retreated in the face of a vastly superior force. Nothing but the extraordinary steadiness of our men prevented them from being entirely cut off. A farmer from th
The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Black Republican on the Vienna fight (search)
e fight near Vienna is still the talk of the camp. The men are all very emphatic in praising Gen. Schenck and Col. McCook for their coolness and bravery, after they were fired upon. Col. McCook took immediate direction of the men, and they say they heard his voice above everything else telling exactly what to do. Gen. Schenck was fired at by a sharp shooter just as he stepped from the cars, and the step probably saved his life, as the ball passed close over his head and pierced the car. Capt. Pease is generally praised for his conduct under fire. He took hold of two or three men and thrust them into the ranks, while the six-pounders were going it. While he had one man by the shoulder putting him in his place, a grape shot passed between them. Officers and men cannot be too highly praised for the style in which they retreated in the face of a vastly superior force. Nothing but the extraordinary steadiness of our men prevented them from being entirely cut off. A farmer from th
The Daily Dispatch: July 4, 1861., [Electronic resource], A Black Republican on the Vienna fight (search)
e fight near Vienna is still the talk of the camp. The men are all very emphatic in praising Gen. Schenck and Col. McCook for their coolness and bravery, after they were fired upon. Col. McCook took immediate direction of the men, and they say they heard his voice above everything else telling exactly what to do. Gen. Schenck was fired at by a sharp shooter just as he stepped from the cars, and the step probably saved his life, as the ball passed close over his head and pierced the car. Capt. Pease is generally praised for his conduct under fire. He took hold of two or three men and thrust them into the ranks, while the six-pounders were going it. While he had one man by the shoulder putting him in his place, a grape shot passed between them. Officers and men cannot be too highly praised for the style in which they retreated in the face of a vastly superior force. Nothing but the extraordinary steadiness of our men prevented them from being entirely cut off. A farmer from th