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Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 4 0 Browse Search
Col. O. M. Roberts, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 12.1, Alabama (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 2 2 Browse Search
The Cambridge of eighteen hundred and ninety-six: a picture of the city and its industries fifty years after its incorporation (ed. Arthur Gilman) 1 1 Browse Search
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9. 32,887W. PalmerJuly 23, 1861. *34,922C. DragarApr. 8, 1862. *35,548N. SmithJune 10, 1862. 36,891Bostwick and SargentNov. 11, 1862. 37,048I. M. MilbankDec. 2, 1862. 37,407J. OliphantJan. 13, 1863. 37,764C. PerleyFeb. 24, 1863. *39,541J. N. SmithAug. 18, 1863. 43,733J. BrownessAug. 2, 1864. 47,088J. W. Cochran.Apr. 14, 1865. 51,213F. B. PrindleNov. 28, 1865. 52,679J. W. CochranFeb. 20, 1866. *135,947Swingle and HuntingtonFeb. 18, 1873. 2. (f.) Hinged at Rear and swinging Lat. 15, 1872. 2. (g.) Hinged at Rear, etc. — Continued. No.Name.Date. 133,665W. RichardsDec. 3, 1872. 134,014J. F. SwinburnDec. 17, 1872. 3. Sliding Transversely through Mortise. (a.) Moving Vertically. *1,084Bailey, Ripley, and SmithFeb. 20, 1839. *5,146E. WessonJune 5, 1847. 5,763C. SharpSept. 12, 1848. *5,814M. M. CassSept. 26, 1848. *6,136G. W. BuchelFeb. 20, 1849. *6,663W. HuntAug. 21, 1849. *11,283E. BaldwinJuly 11, 1854. 12,529R. WhiteMar. 13, 1855. *12,655G. H.
Robert Cowen and J. Edwin Davis, as for some years past Colonel Dodge, though retaining the presidency, has been much absent, and has exercised only an advisory control. Yet his juniors insist that at times they are glad to rely upon his judgment, matured by many years of intimate knowledge of the underlying requirements of the business, and they are unwilling to permit him to retire from the helm. The directors have been unchanged for years: the three officers already named, and Messrs. J. N. Smith and Rhodes Lockwood. In the average mind Cambridge is associated with the shady elms under which have walked and studied and played so many of our foremost citizens; its notable manufacturing facilities are known to few outside of the vicinity of Boston. There are, however, few cities in the world where building land and building facilities are so good; where water is abundant; where coal can be delivered in the original bottom at the very door of your boiler-room; where freight i
the Twenty-fifth, Thirty-ninth and Fiftieth, under Colonel Toulmin. Col. John C. Marrast died in the service, after having made a glorious record. Capt. Abner C. Gaines was killed, and Maj. R. B. Armistead mortally wounded, at Shiloh. Lieuts. J. N. Smith and J. H. Wall fell at Murfreesboro, Lieut.-Col. John Weedon, Capt. James Deas Nott and Lieuts. Waller Mordecai and Renfroe were killed at Chickamauga; Col. Benj. R. Hart, Capt. Thomas M. Brindley, Lieuts. Leary and Stackpoole at Atlanta, 8 and 20, 1862. Vol. XVII, Part 2—(633) Gardner's brigade, Bragg's army, June 30, 1862. Vol. XX, Part 1—(658) Withers' division, army of Tennessee, Stone's River campaign. (677) Casualties, IX killed and 83 wounded. Among the killed, Lieuts. J. N. Smith and J. H. Wall. (973) Roll of honor, battle of Murfreesboro, December 31 to January 2, 1863: Sergt. W. D. Sumner, Company A; Private William Sellers, Company B; Corp. J. L. Husbands, Company C; Sergt. B. T. Nelson, Company D; Sergt. P.