Found 466 total hits in 165 results.
ded and captured in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 311, 312 (note). Dies at Charlottesville, 332.
Schenck, General, Federal officer, fights Stonewall Jackson, with Milroy, 178-180.
Schouler, William, adjutant-general of Massachusetts, 22.
Scott, Lieutenant, aid to General Gordon, 206, 222, 224.
Promoted to be captain, 273.
Gallantly in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 310 (note).
Scott, Majors of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania, a gift-maker, 173.
Second Mass. Regiment, the, origin oScott, Majors of the Twenty-ninth Pennsylvania, a gift-maker, 173.
Second Mass. Regiment, the, origin of, 2, 3.
Names of first applicants to join, 4-6.
Names of eminent citizens who assisted in forming, 6.
Prompt and liberal subscription of money for, 7.
The first regiment of Volunteers offered to the General Government to serve during the war, 9.
High character of its officers testified to, 17, 18,--with some account of one exception thereto, 19-22.
Good discipline of, while at Brook Farm, 22,--and elsewhere, 24. 50, 90, 91.
Leaves Massachusetts for Virginia, 23.
Its fine order and appe
eral Cavalry, 162.
Forms the rearguard in Banks's retreat from Strasburg, 201.
Is met by Stonewall Jackson at Middletown (Va.), and fights an unequal battle, 209, 210.
Retreats towards Strasburg, and fights again, and then makes his escape, 211; enumeration of his forces in this battle, 211 (note),--and what became of them, 212.
He reaches Newtown, and confers with General Gordon, from whom he refuses to take the command, 215, 216.
Subsequent services of, 272.
Hawes, Captain, 273.
Herr, Mr., Rebel miller, has his flourmills destroyed, 37, 47, 48.
Hill, A. P., division commander under Stonewall Jackson, 279, 289, 292, 296.
Horse, a, one that was a trial to his owner, 139-141,--and another that was stolen and recovered, 269-271.
Horton, Charles P., acting adjutant to General Gordon, 241 (note).
Howe, Church, Lieutenant and Quartermaster of Fifteenth Mass. Regiment, 65.
Implicated in movements leading to the disaster of Ball's Bluff, 66, 69, 70.
J
Jackson, S
ey were free, 159.
Neff, Colonel, Rebel officer, 220, 233.
Newtown (Va.), the scene of a hot fight between Federal and Confederate troops in Banks's flight to Winchester, 207, 208. General Gordon's retreat from, 217, 218.
P
Patterson, General, commands Federal forces in Civil War, 23. Relieved by General Banks, 29, 30.
Entreats his three-months men to remain for further service, 33.
Payments to Rebels not in arms for supplies taken, 25.
Some cases of refusal of, 34, 35.
Peabody, Lieutenant, 229.
Peggy, a slave, experiences of, 168. 169, 173.
At last reaches the land of freedom, 247, 260.
Pelouze, Major, 300, 316.
Perkins, S. G., Lieutenant, of the Second Massachusetts, killed at Cedar Mountain, 332.
Perkins, Major, adjutant-general to Banks, 172.
Urges Banks to action, at Strasburg, without effect, 192.
In battle of Ccdar Mountain, 299, 316, 317.
Philbrick, Captain, commands a company in the Fifteenth Massachusetts, 65.
Is implicated in movement
131.
Goodwin, Captain, of the Second Mass. Regiment, 13.
Is sick at Little Washington, 277.
Killed in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 311, 332.
Gorman, General, Federal officer in Civil War, 113, 116.
Gould, Major, historian of the Tenth Maine Regiment, 301, 302 (and notes), 316 (note), 349.
Grafton, Lieutenant, 219.
Greene, George S., commands a brigade under Banks, 226, 257.
H
Hall and Lounsburg, telegraph operators, who saved a bridge from destruction, 172 (note).
Hamilton, General, commands Federal troops in Civil War, 62, 113, 114.
Hardy, Captain, 76.
Hatch, General, commander of Federal Cavalry, 162.
Forms the rearguard in Banks's retreat from Strasburg, 201.
Is met by Stonewall Jackson at Middletown (Va.), and fights an unequal battle, 209, 210.
Retreats towards Strasburg, and fights again, and then makes his escape, 211; enumeration of his forces in this battle, 211 (note),--and what became of them, 212.
He reaches Newtown, and confers with Ge
commander under McDowell, 278, 279, 330.
Rinker, Mr., a Virginia Rebel and storekeeper,--how his disloyalty was rewarded, 153, 154.
Roberts, General, staff-officer to Pope, 282.
Ruger, Colonel, commands Third Wisconsin Regiment at battle of Cedar Mountain, 291.
Rumors, reports, fears, and false alarms, 35, 36, 39-46, 61, 63, 64, 97, 99, 109-112, 163, 165, 166.
Russell, H. S., captain in the Second Mass. Regiment,--captured in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 312.
S.
Savage, James, Captain, and afterwards Major, in the Second Mass. Regiment, 12, 220, 231-233.
Mortally wounded and captured in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 311, 312 (note). Dies at Charlottesville, 332.
Schenck, General, Federal officer, fights Stonewall Jackson, with Milroy, 178-180.
Schouler, William, adjutant-general of Massachusetts, 22.
Scott, Lieutenant, aid to General Gordon, 206, 222, 224.
Promoted to be captain, 273.
Gallantly in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 310 (note).
Scott, M
he Boston Advertiser, blaming the War Department, and his final dismissal from the service by the President, 266, 267 (and note).
Courtenay, Colonel, commander of Rebel battery under Stonewall Jackson, 199, 235.
Crane, Major, 121.
Killed at Cedar Mountain, 305.
Crawford, S. W., Brigadier-general under Banks, 226, 258, 281-283, 289, 291, 294.
In the battle of
Cedar Mountain, 305. What his orders from Pope were, and their bearing on the question of Banks's responsibility, 351.
Crosby, Lieutenant, 230.
Crowninshield, Lieutenant, wounded at the battle of Winchester, 241 (note.)
Currency, Federal and Confederate, comparative value of, 166, 167.
Curtis, Greely S., first to apply for a commission in the Second Mass. Regiment, 4; holds a captaincy in same, 13.
D
Dabney, Southern historian and eulogist of Stonewall Jackson,--extracts from his Life of General Jackson, 180, 185, 198, 200, 209, 210, 212-214, 217, 219-221, 223, 227, 228, 231-233, 235, 237, 240, 242,
6, 19 (notes), 90, 92, 105, 252, 285, 286 (note), 332 (note).
R
Ranson, James L., 109.
Rebel quartermaster, a, the defenceless condition of his estate and family, 156, 157.
Rebels, unarmed, male and female, experiences with, 158, 161, 162-164.
Revere, Major, 70.
Ricketts, General, division commander under McDowell, 278, 279, 330.
Rinker, Mr., a Virginia Rebel and storekeeper,--how his disloyalty was rewarded, 153, 154.
Roberts, General, staff-officer to Pope, 282.
Ruger, Colonel, commands Third Wisconsin Regiment at battle of Cedar Mountain, 291.
Rumors, reports, fears, and false alarms, 35, 36, 39-46, 61, 63, 64, 97, 99, 109-112, 163, 165, 166.
Russell, H. S., captain in the Second Mass. Regiment,--captured in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 312.
S.
Savage, James, Captain, and afterwards Major, in the Second Mass. Regiment, 12, 220, 231-233.
Mortally wounded and captured in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 311, 312 (note). Dies at Charlottesville,
nd terrible, 355, 356.
Battlefields, the, incidents and sights of, 122, 123, 189, 331.
Bayard, General, Federal cavalry officer, 278, 279-281, 288.
Beal, Colonel, commands the Tenth Maine in the battle of Cedar Mountain, 299-301.
Blake, Major, of the Fifth Connecticut, in battle of Cedar Mountain, 305.
Boy-orderly, a Rebel, how his cowardice delays Jackson's attack on Banks, 198, 199.
Branhall, Lieutenant, 72.
Broadhead, Colonel, Federal cavalry officer, 135, 204.
Brockenbrough, Colonel, commander of Rebel battery under Stonewall Jackson, 199, 235.
Brook Farm, the camping-ground of the Second Mass. Regiment, 13.
Brown, Lt.-Colonel, 39, 45.
Wounded at Cedar Mountain, 304.
Buford, General, Federal cavalry officer, 278, 280.
Burks, Colonel, Rebel officer, 124-126.
C
Cameron, Simon (Secretary of War), writes Governor Andrew in regard to Massachusetts regiments for the war, 15, 16.
Camp Andrew, the name given to the first camping-ground of th