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Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 5 5 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 3 3 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2 1 1 Browse Search
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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Connecticut, (search)
dies at Hartford......June 10, 1865 Legislature which convened at Hartford, May 3, adjourns after the longest session on record up to date......July 21, 1865 An exciting election for governor; President Johnson's influence favoring James E. English; Joseph R. Hawley, Republican, elected by only 541 majority......April, 1866 Legislature ratifies the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution......June 30, 1866 Legislature ratifies the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution......March 16, 1869 Election for governor being close, a joint committee of the General Assembly, appointed to examine returns May 3, report total vote 94,860; for Marshall Jewell, Republican, 47,473; for James E. English, Democrat, 47,373; scattering, 14; declare Jewell elected......May 10, 1871 Governor Jewell assumes office......May 16, 1871 Noah Porter elected president of Yale University in place of Theodore D. Woolsey, resigned......1871 Temperance party, represented by about 100 delegates
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Kansas, (search)
; dies......Sept. 8, 1867 Lieut.-Gov. John W. Stevenson succeeds......Sept. 8, 1867 Governor Stevenson authorizes three companies of volunteers against a band of regulators and lynchers in Marion, Boyle, and adjoining counties......Oct. 11, 1867 John W. Stevenson elected governor......Aug. 3, 1868 Legislature rejects the Fifteenth Amendment to Constitution......March 13, 1869 A band of so-called Ku-klux attack Frank Bowen near Nicholasville, who in self-defence kills one......March 16, 1869 Seven hundred colored delegates hold a State educational convention near Louisville......July 14, 1869 Great commercial convention at Louisville, ex-President Millard Fillmore presides; 520 delegates from twenty-nine States......Oct. 13, 1869 Affray at Somerset, Pulaski county, from the whipping of one Cooper by regulators; forty men engaged; three killed......Nov. 20, 1869 Legislature establishes an insurance bureau......May 20, 1870 Governor Stevenson resigns. Preston
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), South Carolina, (search)
r the reconstruction acts of Congress, which assembles at Charleston, Jan. 14, and completes its labors, March 17, ratified by the people, 70,558 to 27,288......April 14-16, 1868 South Carolina readmitted into the Union......June 25, 1868 State penitentiary at Columbia opened......1868 J. K. Jillson elected the first State superintendent of public instruction in South Carolina......1868 Legislature ratifies the Fifteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States......March 16, 1869 State labor convention held at Columbia......November, 1869 Union Reform party organized and holds its first State convention at Charleston......June 16, 1870 Free common-school system established......1870 Tax-payers' convention held at the State capitol in Columbia to devise means for the redemption of the State from her financial embarrassments ......May, 1871 Owing to murder and outrage in the upper country, by the Ku-klux, President Grant, by proclamation, Oct. 12, su
3W. R. PapeNov. 5, 1867. 71,149J. ElsonNov. 19, 1867. 72,434D. B. WessonDec. 17, 1867. 78,519E. H. EscherichJune 2, 1868. 78,847D. B. WessonJune 9, 1868. 84,373W. R. PapeNov. 24, 1868. 85,252C. E. SneiderDec. 22, 1868. 87,814G. T. AbbeyMar. 16, 1869. 88,470W. GolcherMar. 30, 1869. 88,890J. McGovernApr. 13, 1869. 89,947G. SchulzMay 11, 1869. 90,214F. WohlgemuthMay 18, 1869. 91,616L. T. FairbanksJune 22, 1869. 91,624J. A. HackenbackJune 22, 1869. 93,023G. H. ToddJuly 27, 1869. 95,9616P. SchulerJan. 5, 1869. *86,723S. G. BayesFeb. 9, 1869. 1. Sliding Longitudinally Backward. (a.) Operated by a Lever.—Continued. No.Name.Date. 86,739T. M. DeprezFeb. 9, 1869. 86,971T. B. ConklinFeb. 16, 1869. 87,997D. WilliamsonMar. 16, 1869. *111,500L. WheelockJune 31, 1871. *112,563H. J. DrewMar. 14, 1871. *112,564H. J. DrewMar. 14, 1871. *116,642G. R. StetsonJuly 4, 1871. *125,988O. M. RobinsonApr. 23, 1872. 127,873William W. HannahJune 11, 1872. 1. (b.) Withdrawn
46. Karchiski, in 1860, subsequently treated the paper with glycerine, to give it suppleness. Stuart Gwynne made fractional currency of it about 1865 or 1866. To avoid the imperfect penetration of the acid, J. J. Ott treated a number of thin sheets with the acidulous solution, and combined them into a homogeneous sheet. A. T. Schmidt added the glycerine to the acid. Thomas Taylor (England, 1869; United States, 1871) treated the paper with chloride of zinc. See, — Hudson, March 16, 1869.Schmidt, April 4, 1871. Hudson, September 27, 1870, two patents.Hanna, October 31, 1871. Sheldon, January 25, 1870. Parclose. (Nautical.) The limber-hole. Pa-renthe-sis. A mark consisting of two curved lines face to face (). They inclose matter which is cognate to the subject, but which may be omitted without impairing the grammatical construction or the substantial meaning. Par′er. In Fig. 3558, the apple, fixed on the rotary fork c, is pared by the knife k, al<
ansMar. 27, 1866. 53,783Goodrich et al.Apr. 10, 1866. 54,715GirandinsMay 15, 1866. 55,417HawkinsJune 3, 1866. 60,456ZinckDec. 11, 1866. 64,051WheatonApr. 23, 1867. 67,524FroelichAug. 6, 1867. 81,080GoodrichAug. 18, 1868. 87,810WheelockMar. 16, 1869. 93,459MacaulayAug. 10, 1869. 98,409Pratt et al.Dec. 28, 1869. 99,122WarnerJan. 25, 1870. 102,787DulaneyMay 10, 1870. 103,609HawkinsMay 31, 1870. 25. Tension Devices. (continued). No.Name.Date. 103,643MooneyMay 31, 1870. 110,424Ben(?) Mold. Loew, June 25, 1868. Woody fiber digested in hydrochloric acid, and heat; acid distilled over. Glucose and paper-stock the results. Wesselholft, October 6, 1868. Extract of malt for dietetic purposes. Sim and Hutchinson, March 16, 1869. Meal treated with bisulphide of carbon to extract oil, rendering starch more easily saccharified. Delamarre, December 6, 1870. Sweet potatoes steamed, mashed, and mixed with malt, macerated, steamed, pulp precipitated, saccharine liquid
Infantry, May 30, 1864. Mustered out, Aug. 29, 1865. Duran, Luther B. Second Lieutenant, 16th Unattached Company, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Aug. 6, 1864. Mustered out, Nov. 14, 1864. Duren, Charles Maltby. Sergeant, 24th Mass. Infantry, Oct. 24, 1861. Second Lieutenant, 54th Mass. Infantry, July 19, 1863; mustered, Jan. 7, 1864. First Lieutenant, Mar. 11, 1864; mustered, Mar. 30. Adjutant, Mar. 18, 1865. Resigned (disability), May 17, 1865. Died at Bangor, Me., Mar. 16, 1869. Durgin, Horace W. First Lieutenant, Regimental Quartermaster, 48th Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Dec. 8, 1862. Mustered out, Sept. 3, 1863. Durivage, Henry A. Captain, 3d Mass. Cavalry, Feb. 20, 1862. Drowned in the Mississippi River, Apr. 23, 1862. Du Verge, Louis Asty De R. See De Rathier Du Verge, Louis Asty. Dwight, Henry Cecil. Sergeant Major, 27th Mass. Infantry, Sept. 20, 1861. Second Lieutenant, Dec. 7, 1861. First Lieutenant, Apr. 1, 186