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eted, May 2, 1804 Sold to a Catholic Society, Nov. 8, 1862 Moved back 12 feet to widen Hanover street, 1870 New South, Summer and Bedford sts., dedicated, Jan. 8, 1715 New house completed and dedicated, Dec. 28, 1814 Removed to give place for stores, May, 1868 Newbury and Berkeley streets, corner-stone laid, Oct. 17, 1865 North Square Methodist, Father Taylor's, cornerstone laid, Oct. 3, 1822 North Russell street, Methodist, built, 1838 Sold to African Society, June 22, 1865 Old South, building of cedar wood, began, July 20, 1669 Wood removed to build of brick, March, 1728 New brick house completed, Apr. 26, 1730 Had a British riding-school and a bar, Nov., 1775 Refitted for religious services, Jan., 1782 Furnished with a new bell, July 27, 1816 Occupied for a recruiting office, Aug., 1862 Churches Old South, outside repaired and painted, Dec., 1867 Society, religious services closed after the fire, Nov. 9, 1872 New Dartmou
Rev. James K. Ewer , Company 3, Third Mass. Cav., Roster of the Third Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment in the war for the Union, Company E (search)
; pile-driver. Aug. 22, 1862. Killed in action, Sept. 19, 1864, Winchester, Va. George H. Randall, Rochester, 20, s; farmer. Aug. 22, 1862. Disch. May 20, 1865. Unof. Edmund E. Rice, Boston, 18, s; tinman. Aug. 20, 1862. Wounded, Cane River. Disch. disa. Feb. 12, 1865. James Riley, North Braintree, 30, m; laborer. Sept. 8, 1862. Disch. disa. Jan. 18, 1864, New Orleans, La. John E. Robbins, Brownington, Vt., Cr. Randolph, 27, m; farmer. March 25, 1864. Disch. disa. June 22, 1865. Unof. Benjamin Roberts, Boston, 40, m; ship carpenter. Aug. 16, 1862. Died June 20, 1863, New Orleans, La. Robert Scott, Stoughton, 40, m; laborer. Aug. 22, 1862. Died Sept. 10, 1863, Baton Rouge, La. Christopher K. Smith, Boston, 19, s; caulker, Aug. 20, 1862. Died July 13, 1863, Baton Rouge, La. Cornelius Sullivan, Salem, 32, m; laborer. Aug. 22, 1862. Disch. May 20, 1865. Unof. James Walker, Boston, 28, s; mariner. Sept. 15, 1862. Deserted, Dec. 3, 1862, Jam
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
s, commanded by Capt. John Landis. He was soon promoted to orderly-sergeant, and in December was appointed aide-de-camp on the staff of Gen. M. Jeff Thompson, his uncle. He served in this capacity until the summer of 1863, when he resigned to again become a private, this time in Company D, of the Eighth Missouri cavalry, Marmaduke's brigade. He soon rose by promotion, and was captain of his company in the following winter, a rank which he held until he surrendered at Shreveport, La., June 22, 1865. He was a gallant soldier and in the course of his career was permitted to participate in nearly all the famous military events of the Trans-Mississippi, including the battles of Fort Scott, Kan.; Lexington, Mo.; Helena, Little Rock, Jenkins' Ferry and Pine Bluff, Ark., and Pilot Knob, Brunswick, Big Blue and Independence, Mo. During the great raid through Missouri under General Price he was in ninety-eight battles and skirmishes. He was wounded at Kennett, Mo., Pine Bluff, Ark., and s
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.11 (search)
blockaded, and yet the Geneva Commission found that three of these cruisers had destroyed ships and cargoes of the value of $15,000,000. Maffitt in the Florida and Semmes in the Alabama won immortal fame, and the exploits of Waddell in the Shenandoah will ever be remembered with admiration. When the flag of the new nation was furled forever upon land, the Shenandoah was far off in the Northern Pacific among American whalers, and the last gun for the Confederacy was fired from her deck June 22d, 1865. The Shenandoah found her way to a British port, and surrendered to a British Admiral, November 6th, 1865. To sum up the history of the Confederate Navy it is an almost unbroken record of energy and devotion and genius making a brave struggle, and often almost on the point of succeeding against odds that were absolutely overwhelming. We build monuments to heroes, prompted by the noblest impulses of the human heart, and that future generations may imitate their example. In perform
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 37. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Jefferson Davis. (search)
arbored disunion proclivities, or of any inclination toward secession heresies. But truth is truth, justice is justice, and an act of proposed magnanimity should not be impaired by both an untruth and an injustice. The statement in the House of Representatives on Thursday last, made by General Banks during the debate on the proposed Amnesty Bill, was more entirely correct than, perhaps, he had reason to credit. What I now relate are facts: Mr. Horace Greeley received a letter, dated June 22, 1865, from Mrs. Jefferson Davis. It was written at Savannah, Georgia, where Mrs. Davis and her family were then detained under a sort of Military restraint. Mr. Davis himself, recently taken prisoner, was at Fortress Monroe; and the most conspicuous special charge threatened against him by the Bureau of Military Justice was of guilty knowledge relating to the assassination of President Lincoln. The principal purpose of the letter was, imploring Mr. Greeley to bring about a speedy trial of
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