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Historic leaves, volume 7, April, 1908 - January, 1909, Company E, 39th Massachusetts Infantry, in the Civil War.—(Iv.) (search)
; died soon after the War. Kinsley, Frederick R., second lieutenant Company I, Fifth Regiment, from May 1 to July 31, 1861; went out as captain of Company E; promoted to major July 13, 1864; promoted to colonel June 7, 1865; taken prisoner August 19, 1864; paroled March, 1865; lives at Dorchester, N. H. (Cheever P. O.). Kinsley, Willard C., enlisted in Company I, Fifth Regiment, from May 1 to July 31, 1861; went out as second lieutenant of Company E; promoted to first lieutenant November 13, 1862; to captain March 30, 1864; wounded June 17, 1864; mortally wounded March 31; died April 2, 1865. Locke, John F., taken prisoner (Salisbury, N. C.) August 19, 1864; returned May, 1865; discharged May 26, 1865; assistant in Public Library, Boston. Lovett, Washington, taken prisoner October 11, 1863; died at Andersonville, Ga., July 12, 1864. McCarthy, John, transferred to Veteran Reserve Corps September 12, 1863; died in Somerville November 2, 1907. McGurdy, Alexander, serve
Runaway. --$25 will be paid on delivery to me, in the city of Richmond, Va, of my black girl Eliza, 21 years old, 5 feet tall, weighs 112 pounds, good teeth, full head of hair, pleasant countenance; has relatives near Farmville, Va.; she an off the 13th day of November, 1862; has lived in Richmond three years. Hugh Kagan. no 14--1m*
ory. I feel confident it will be enough for me to state the necessity that exists to ensure a supply of the articles named. Let the people in each county and corporation in the State set to work immediately to procure whatever may be necessary for the soldiers from their immediate neighborhoods. Let them appoint a trusted agent to collect the articles that may be contributed, to carry them in person to the encampments, and to see to their proper distribution. These contributions will cheer and comfort thousands, and call down the blessings of Heaven upon yourselves and families. The unusually early appearance of winter induces me to make this appeal now, and admonishes me to urge upon you to expedite your offerings. Given under my hand at Richmond, and under the Deal of the Commonwealth, this 13th day of November, 1862, and in the 87th year of the Commonwealth. John Letcher. By the Governor: Geo. W. Hunford, no 15--1t Sec'y of the Commonwealth.
e moment when the return of peace might become possible. I request you, sir in the name of his Majesty, to submit these considerations to Lord Russell or to Prince Gortschak ff, begging him to state the views of the Government or her Britannic Majesty or the Court of Russia. Drouyn De L'Huys. Earl Russell's reply. Foreign Office, Nov. 14, 1862. The following dispatch was addressed by Earl Russell to Earl Cowley, her Majesty's Ambassador at Paris: Foreign Office, Nov. 13, 1862. My Lord --The Count De Flahauit came to the Foreign office by appointment on Monday, the 10th instant, and read to me a dispatch from M. Drouyn de l'huys, relating to the civil war in North America. In this dispatch, the Minister for Foreign Affairs states that the Emperor has followed with painful interest the struggle which had now been going on for more than a year on the American going on for more than a year on the American continent. He does justice to the energy and persev
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