Your search returned 35 results in 12 document sections:

arm and breast, serious; Francis Wilson, face and neck, serious; Ira M. Young, slightly; Michael McCarthy. Missing: David B. Brown, Patrick Quinn. Company K--Killed: Capt. R. C. Goodwin; privates T. Daly, B. F. Montague, J. R. Roberts, Thomas Watson. Wounded: Sergt. W. Log<*>n, flesh, both legs; Corp. G. W.. Fenner, bayonet wound in leg; Corp. J. McCarthy, left foot broken; privates, M. McMullen, leg; Peter Carter, fingers broken; J. Nevel, do.; M. S. Ditson, calf of right leg; M. Backus, f, killed; Sergeant George Haig, wounded in hand; privates, D. Custard, missing and supposed to be killed; James Davis, wounded in side; George Kays, wounded in leg and foot; Charles Meyers, wounded severely in leg; John Gray, wounded in chin; Thomas Watson, wounded in leg; W. Mothersill, wounded in leg. Company C--Killed: Corporal Geo. W. Young, private W. H. Arbor. Wounded: Sergeant Chas. Friedeborn, in breast; Corporal Charles Fairfax, in thigh; private Geo. W. Gaugh, in side; James A. Mo
arm and breast, serious; Francis Wilson, face and neck, serious; Ira M. Young, slightly; Michael McCarthy. Missing: David B. Brown, Patrick Quinn. Company K--Killed: Capt. R. C. Goodwin; privates T. Daly, B. F. Montague, J. R. Roberts, Thomas Watson. Wounded: Sergt. W. Log<*>n, flesh, both legs; Corp. G. W.. Fenner, bayonet wound in leg; Corp. J. McCarthy, left foot broken; privates, M. McMullen, leg; Peter Carter, fingers broken; J. Nevel, do.; M. S. Ditson, calf of right leg; M. Backus, f, killed; Sergeant George Haig, wounded in hand; privates, D. Custard, missing and supposed to be killed; James Davis, wounded in side; George Kays, wounded in leg and foot; Charles Meyers, wounded severely in leg; John Gray, wounded in chin; Thomas Watson, wounded in leg; W. Mothersill, wounded in leg. Company C--Killed: Corporal Geo. W. Young, private W. H. Arbor. Wounded: Sergeant Chas. Friedeborn, in breast; Corporal Charles Fairfax, in thigh; private Geo. W. Gaugh, in side; James A. Mo
aster; John Emery, ordinary seaman; William Wilson, cockswain; Edward Rawes, master-at-arms; Henry Tucker, officers' cook; David Leggett, seaman; Frank Currian, first-class fireman; Henry Godson, ordinary seaman; Samuel Henry, seaman; John Horrigan, first-class fireman; Edgar Tripp, ordinary seaman; David Williams, ordinary seaman; Richard Parkinson, officers' steward; William Barnes, quarter-gunner; George Freemantle, quartermaster; John Russell, seaman ; Henry Hestake, ordinary seaman; Thomas Watson, ordinary seaman; John Johnson, ordinary seaman; John Smith, seaman; Henry McCoy, seaman; Thomas Parker, boy; James Ochure, seaman; Edwin Burrell, seaman; James Higgs, seaman; Patrick Bradley, fireman; Match Mudick, ordinary seaman; William Miller, ordinary seaman; John Benson, coal-heaver; Joseph Pruson, coal-heaver; James Maguire, coal-heaver; John Casen, seaman; Henry Higgin, seaman; Frank Hamonds, seaman; Nicholas Adams, landsman; Michael Shields, seaman; Peter Laperty, second class
Doc. 211.-meeting of the Baptists, at Brooklyn, N. Y., May 29, 1861. A. B. Capwell, Esq., presided, and the following officers were appointed: Vice-Presidents--Hon. George N. Briggs, Rev. G. S. Webb, D. D., Thomas Watson, Esq., A. Hubbell, Esq. Secretaries--Rev. W. H. Shailer, D. D., Rev. J. B. Simmons. Rev. George C. Baldwin, D. D., opened the proceedings with prayer, after which The Committee, appointed at a preliminary meeting--Rev. Dr. Wm. R. Williams, N. Y.; Rev. Dr. Rufus Babcock, N. J.; Rev. Dr. E. E. Cummings, New Hampshire; Rev. Dr. S. Baker; Rev. J. H. Smith, of Penn.; Rev. Dr. W. H. Shailer, Me.; Rev. Dr. S. B. Swain, Mass.,--presented, through the Chairman, Rev. Dr. Williams, the following report: The Assembly of Baptists gathered from the various Northern States of the Union would, in the present solemn crisis of our National history, put on record some expression of their judgment as Christians, loving their country, and seeking, in the fear and from
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 8: sword in hand. (search)
corners of the principal streets, armed sentinels, wrapped in blankets, were seen stationed, or walking up and down. Every man who appeared in the street was forthwith arrested and imprisoned in the Armory. Captain Brown and his sons Oliver and Watson, Stevens and two others, were stationed inside of the Armory grounds; Kagi, with Leeman, Stewart Taylor, Anderson, (black,) and Copeland, (colored,) held the lower part of the town and the rifle works; Cook, Owen Brown, Tidd, Merriam, and Barclay and Win. Thompson. Imprisoned, and near to death, lay Lewis Leary and Stevens. Copeland was a captive. On the street lay the dead bodies of Hazlitt and Newby. In the engine house were the remains of Oliver Brown, and Dauphin Thompson; while Watson, the Captain's son, lay without hope of recovery. The only unwounded survivors of the Liberators in the engine house were Captain Brown, Jerry Anderson, Edwin Coppoc, and Shields Green, the negro. Eight Virginia hostages, and a small number of
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 9: fallen among thieves. (search)
ies of men killed on the previous day, and found inside the house; three wounded men, one of them just at the last gasp of life, [Anderson;] and two others groaning in pain. One of the dead was Brown's son Oliver. The wounded father and his son Watson were lying on the grass, the old man presenting a gory spectacle. He had a severe bayonet wound in his side, and his face and hair were clotted with blood. Porte-Crayon, a Virginia artist and author, and a fiendish historian of the holy Invaer, the death of John Brown's sons, and the accommodations provided .for them by the Virginians: I was with your sons when they fell. Oliver lived but a very few moments after he was shot. He spoke no word, but yield'd calmly to his fate. Watson was shot at ten o'clock on Monday morning, and died about three o'clock on Wednesday morning. He suffered much. Though mortally wounded at ten o'clock, yet at three o'clock Monday afternoon he fought bravely against the men who charged on us. Wh
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 2: Judicial alacrity. (search)
s around puzzled, overcome by the abstract nature of the proposition? Judge. This man will be hung if you find him guilty. Will that certainty of his being hung prevent you from finding him guilty, if the evidence convinces you he is so? Juror. (Catching the idea.) No, sir — no, sir. Judge. Very well, sir; you can take your seat as a juror. Mr. Botts, who had solemnly promised to John Brown to defend him faithfully, did not fulfil this moral and professional obligation, for a jury was obtained without delay and without any objection on his part. The names of these unfortunate men They were — Richard Timberlake, Joseph Myers, Thomas Watson, Jr., Isaac Dust, John C. McClure, William Rightsdale, Jacob J. Millar, Thomas Osborne, George W. Boyer, John C. Wiltshare, George W. Tapp, and William A. Martin. were announced, but they were not sworn till the following day. At five o'clock, the prisoner was carried over to jail on his cot, and the Court adjourned till morni
James Redpath, The Public Life of Captain John Brown, Chapter 8: the conquering pen. (search)
hat any remaining balance that may become my due from my father's estate may be paid in equal amounts to my wife, and to each of my children, and to the widows of Watson and Owen Brown, by my brother. John Avis, Witness. John Brown. A final codicil. Charlestown, Jefferson Co., Va., Dec. 2, 1859. It is my desire ththe following day I was taken prisoner, immediately after which I received several sabre cuts in my head, and bayonet stabs in my body. As nearly as I can learn, Watson died of his wound on Wednesday the second, or on Thursday the third day after I was taken. Dauphin was killed when I was taken, and Anderson, I suppose, also. e of crossing over on the ice to Westport. If you go soon, the route by Glens Falls to Elizabethtown will probably be the best. I have just learned that our poor Watson lingered with his wound until Wednesday about noon of the 19th Oct. Oliver died near my side in a few moments after he was shot. Dauphin died the next morning af
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 1, Mass. officers and men who died., List of Massachusetts officers and soldiers killed in action. (search)
y 15, 1864. Waters, Abraham, Farrier,2d Mass. Cav.,Dranesville, Va.,Feb. 22, 1864. Waters, George W.,20th Mass. Inf.,Ball's Bluff, Va.,Oct. 21, 1861. Waters, John,57th Mass. Inf.,Petersburg, Va.,June 17, 1864. Watkins, Charles S., Sergt.,25th Mass. Inf.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 3, 1864. Watson, Henry W., Corp.,24th Mass. Inf.,Darbytown Road, Va.,Oct. 13, 1864. Watson, Ransom C.,26th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Watson, Robert,28th Mass. Inf.,Po River, Va.,May 10, 1864. Watson, Thomas,2d Mass. Inf.,Cedar Mountain, Va.,Aug. 9, 1862. Watts, Ruggles T.,3d Mass. Cav.,Sabine Cross Roads, La.,April 8, 1864. Webb, Augustine F., 2d Lieut.,40th Mass. Inf.,Morris Island, S. C.,Aug. 20, 1863. Webb, James,2d Mass. Inf.,Chancellorsville, Va.,May 3, 1863. Webb, Robert F., Corp.,36th Mass. Inf.,Poplar Spring Church, VaSept. 30, 1864. Webber, Joseph W., Sergt.,34th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Webster, Fletcher, Col.,12th Mass. Inf.,Bull Run (2d), Va.,Aug. 30, 186
y 15, 1864. Waters, Abraham, Farrier,2d Mass. Cav.,Dranesville, Va.,Feb. 22, 1864. Waters, George W.,20th Mass. Inf.,Ball's Bluff, Va.,Oct. 21, 1861. Waters, John,57th Mass. Inf.,Petersburg, Va.,June 17, 1864. Watkins, Charles S., Sergt.,25th Mass. Inf.,Cold Harbor, Va.,June 3, 1864. Watson, Henry W., Corp.,24th Mass. Inf.,Darbytown Road, Va.,Oct. 13, 1864. Watson, Ransom C.,26th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Watson, Robert,28th Mass. Inf.,Po River, Va.,May 10, 1864. Watson, Thomas,2d Mass. Inf.,Cedar Mountain, Va.,Aug. 9, 1862. Watts, Ruggles T.,3d Mass. Cav.,Sabine Cross Roads, La.,April 8, 1864. Webb, Augustine F., 2d Lieut.,40th Mass. Inf.,Morris Island, S. C.,Aug. 20, 1863. Webb, James,2d Mass. Inf.,Chancellorsville, Va.,May 3, 1863. Webb, Robert F., Corp.,36th Mass. Inf.,Poplar Spring Church, VaSept. 30, 1864. Webber, Joseph W., Sergt.,34th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Webster, Fletcher, Col.,12th Mass. Inf.,Bull Run (2d), Va.,Aug. 30, 186