Your search returned 4 results in 4 document sections:

Rev. James K. Ewer , Company 3, Third Mass. Cav., Roster of the Third Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment in the war for the Union, Company C. (search)
Texas, prisoner of war. Franklin R. Roundy, Rockingham, Vt. Cr. Boston, 18, s; farmer. Dec. 7, 1863. M. O. Sept. 28, 1865. John Ryan, East Bridgewater, Cr. Weymouth, 35, s; bootmaker. Dec. 26, 1863. M. O. Sept. 28, 1865. Henry Schmitt, Boston, Cr. Charlestown, 30, s; farmer. Jan. 2, 1864. Deserted Aug. 24, 1865, Ft. Kearney, N. T. William Shirlock, Albany, Cr. Northampton, 43, s; farmer. July 18, 1864. Wounded Oct. 19, 1864. M. O. Sept. 28, 1865. Robert M. Sloan, Franklin, N. Y., 37, m; saddler. Oct. 24, 1863. Disch. Oct. 8, 1865. Prior serv. William C. Smith, Charlestown, 30, m; soldier. Jan. 5, 1864. Wounded Sept. 19, 1864. Disch. disa. Jan. 17, 1865. James B. Steele, Boston, 20, s; salesman. Aug. 22; 1862. Died Jan. 29, 1863, at Baton Rouge, La. David Stoddard, E. Abington, 42, m; seaman. Jan. 5, 1864. Trans. to 49th Co. 2nd Batt. V. R. C., and Disch. disa. Jan. 25, 1865. David stone, Spencer, 31, m; bootmaker. Dec. 4, 1863. M. O. Se
nnsylvania, would seem alike destitute of faith in the power of truth and of the first principles of toleration. May these be the last outrages committed at the North which it will be our duty to chronicle. Another paper presented. The New York Journal of Commerce says: We have omitted to state that the Grand Jury presented one paper (the Brooklyn Weekly Eagle) which has not been in existence for the last seven years. The New York New England Proscription.[from the Franklin (N. Y.) Gazette.] "Publishing Secession"--anti-war--"papers in the New England States is becoming rather a dangerous and unprofitable business."--Palladium. Aye — and it was once "dangerous" for Baptists to be found in the same part of the world where these things are happening. It was once "dangerous" for peaceful and inoffensive Quakers to live in this same boasted New England. "Freedom of conscience" was then no more respected there than "Freedom of speech" and "Freedom of the pre
A lady editor. --Mrs. Flanders, wife of the editor of the Franklin (N. Y.) Gazette has assumed the editorial charge of that paper since the incarceration of her husband at Fort Lafayette.
"The Democracy for the War."[from the Franklin (N. Y.) Gazette.] This is the exultant shout of the New York Tribune, the vile oracle of Abolitionism, and it bases the foul slander upon the fact that James T. Brady, the Breckinridge candidate for Governor in 1860, and always an uncertain, unreliable politician, who never possessed the sympathy or confidence of his party, and John Van Buren, the erratic Prince of the house of Kinderhook, whose irregular, free and easy habits of life and political inconsistencies have rendered him a burden and source of anxiety to any party, attended and took an active part in an Abolition war meeting held in the city of New York a few evening since. The Democracy in favor of this Abolition war!. A blacker falsehood was never uttered, even by Greeley himself, and in behalf of the men who are bravely breasting the storm of fanaticism which is driving the country to destruction, and of the glorious old party of the Constitution, whose traditions give