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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 12 0 Browse Search
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 1, Mass. officers and men who died. 6 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: October 7, 1861., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Your search returned 19 results in 8 document sections:

Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), New Hampshire. (search)
to 22d 1825 to 1831 Isaac Hill22d to 24th 1831 to 1836 John Page24th 1836 Henry Hubbard24th to 27th 1836 to 1842 Franklin Pierce25th to 27th 1837 to 1842 Leonard Wilcox27th 1842 Levi Woodbury27th to 29th 1842 to 1845 Charles G. Atherton28th to 31st1843 to 1849 Benning J. Jenness29th 1845 to 1846 Joseph Cilley to 1846 to 1847 John P. Hale30th to 33d 1847 to 1853 Moses Norris. Jr.31st to 33d 1849 to 1855 Charles G. Atherton33d 1853 Jared W. Williamsto1853 John S. Wellsto1855 James Bell 34th 1855 to 1857 John P. Hale34th to 38th 1855 to 1865 Daniel Clark35th to 39th 1857 to 1866 George G. Fogg39th 1866 to 1867 Aaron H. Cragin39th to 44th 1866 to 1875 James W. Patterson40th to 43d 1867 to 1873 Bainbridge Wadleigh43d to 46th 1873 to 1879 Edward H. Rollins45th to 48th 1877 to 1883 Henry W. Blair46th to 52d 1879 to 1891 Austin F. Pike48th to 49th 1883 to 1886 Person C. Cheney49th to 50th 1886 to1888 William E. Chandler50th to 57th 1888 to 1901 Jacob H. Gallinger52
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Philippine Islands, (search)
ar Mabalacat. Feb. 5. Five thousand Filipino insurgents attacked American garrison at Duroga and were repulsed. Feb. 16. Expedition under Generals Bates and Bell leave Manila to crush rebellion in Camarines. March. Civil commission appointed by President McKinley (Win. H. Taft, Dean C. Worcester, Luke E. Wright, Henry C. ne 12. General Grant reports the capture of an insurgent stronghold near San Miguel. June 21. General MacArthur issues a proclamation of amnesty. Nov. 14. Major Bell entered Tarlac. Nov. 14. Brisk fighting near San Jacinto. Maj. John A. Logan killed. Nov. 24. General Otis announced to the War Department that the wholet. Nov. 26. At Pavia, island of Panay, the 18th and 19th Regiments drive the Filipinos out of their trenches; a captain and one private killed. Nov. 28. Colonel Bell disperses the insurgents in the Dagupan Valley. Bayombong, in the province of Nueva Viscaya, defended by 800 armed Filipinos, surrenders to Lieutenant Monroe
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Political parties in the United States. (search)
chools, etc. Nominated Millard Fillmore for President in 1856. Merged into the Constitutional Union party in 1860. See know-nothing party. Douglas Democrats, 1860 Northern Democrats, supporters of Stephen A. Douglas in the disruption of the Democratic party in 1860. Breckinridge Democrats party, 1860 Southern Democrats, supporters of Breckinridge in 1860. Constitutional Union party, 1860 Democrats, for the Union, the Constitution, and the enforcement of law; supporters of Bell and Everett. Liberal Republicans, 1872. Formed by dissatisfied Republicans, formerly mostly war Democrats. Favored greater leniency towards the Confederates. Nominated Horace Greeley for President, 1872. Straight-out Democrats, 1872. The Tap-root Democrats, displeased by the nomination of Greeley by the Regular Democrats, nominated Charles O'Conor for President; declined, but received about 30,000 popular votes. Temperance, 1872. A national combination of local temperance
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Senate, United States (search)
d Delaware in the Senate—Joshua Clayton, from Jan. 19, 1798, till his death the following July; Thomas Clayton, from Jan. 8, 1824, till March 3, 1827, and again from Jan. 9, 1837, till March 3, 1847; John M. Clayton, from March 4, 1845, till Feb. 23, 1849, and again from March 4, 1853, till his death, Nov. 9, 1856. Three men named Bell, two of them brothers, the third a son of one of them, represented New Hampshire in the Senate—Samuel Bell, from March 4, 1823, till March 4, 1835; his son, James Bell, from July 30, 1855, till May 26, 1859, and Charles Henry Bell from March 13, 1879, till June 17, 1879. At one time during the Cleveland administration both of the Senators from each of three different States resided in the same city, and three Senators occupying adjoining seats and representing two States were born in adjoining counties in one State. In 1892 two Senators, representing one State, had been private soldiers in one and the same volunteer regiment of the Union army. Eleve
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)
. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,May 31, 1862. Bean, William H.,19th Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Bears, Frank,32d Mass. Inf.,Laurel Hill, Va.,May 10, 1864. Beauchmin, Calixte, Corp.,37th Mass. Inf.,Fort Fisher, Va.,April 2, 1865. Becker, Oscar,35th Mass. Inf.,Fort Sedgwick, Va.,April 2, 1865. Bedell, Francis H.,2d Mass. Inf.,Chancellorsville, Va.,May 5, 1863. Beirne, James,39th Mass. Inf.,Laurel Hill, Va.,May 10, 1864. Belden, Seth,37th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Bell, James,21st Mass. Inf.,Chantilly, Va.,Sept. 1, 1862. Bellows, Julius N.,36th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 6, 1864. Bemis, Frederick A., 1st Lieut.,21st Mass. Inf.,Chantilly, Va.,Sept. 1, 1862. Bemis, Henry N.,15th Mass. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,May 31, 1862. Benjamin, George F.,15th Mass. Inf.,Ball's Bluff, Va.,Oct. 21, 1861. Benjamin, Samuel,22d Mass. Inf.,Mechanicsville, Va.,June 26, 1862. Bennett, Albert,31st Mass. Inf.,Sabine Cross Roads, La.,April 8, 1864. Bennett, Benjamin F.,12th Mass
. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,May 31, 1862. Bean, William H.,19th Mass. Inf.,Antietam, Md.,Sept. 17, 1862. Bears, Frank,32d Mass. Inf.,Laurel Hill, Va.,May 10, 1864. Beauchmin, Calixte, Corp.,37th Mass. Inf.,Fort Fisher, Va.,April 2, 1865. Becker, Oscar,35th Mass. Inf.,Fort Sedgwick, Va.,April 2, 1865. Bedell, Francis H.,2d Mass. Inf.,Chancellorsville, Va.,May 5, 1863. Beirne, James,39th Mass. Inf.,Laurel Hill, Va.,May 10, 1864. Belden, Seth,37th Mass. Inf.,Winchester, Va.,Sept. 19, 1864. Bell, James,21st Mass. Inf.,Chantilly, Va.,Sept. 1, 1862. Bellows, Julius N.,36th Mass. Inf.,Wilderness, Va.,May 6, 1864. Bemis, Frederick A., 1st Lieut.,21st Mass. Inf.,Chantilly, Va.,Sept. 1, 1862. Bemis, Henry N.,15th Mass. Inf.,Fair Oaks, Va.,May 31, 1862. Benjamin, George F.,15th Mass. Inf.,Ball's Bluff, Va.,Oct. 21, 1861. Benjamin, Samuel,22d Mass. Inf.,Mechanicsville, Va.,June 26, 1862. Bennett, Albert,31st Mass. Inf.,Sabine Cross Roads, La.,April 8, 1864. Bennett, Benjamin F.,12th Mass
. G., 499 Bean, James, 562 Bean, S. A., 124, 441 Bean, W. H., 333 Bean, W. S., 499 Beard, W. R., 499 Bears, Frank, 333 Beatter, Charles, 499 Beauchmin, Calixte, 333 Beauregard, G. T., 58, 121 Beavy, Henry, 499 Beck, W. J., 490 Becker, Ferdinand, 499 Becker, Oscar, 333 Beckwith, H. A., 70, 441 Beckwith, H. E., 499 Beckwith, R. S., 441 Bedell, F. H., 333 Beebe, H. W., 441 Beiber, Oscar, 499 Beirne, James, 333 Belden, Seth, 333 Belger, William, 441 Belknap, A. R., 441 Bell, James, 333 Bell, L. V., 141 Bell, William, 499 Bellows, H. E., 499 Bellows, J. N., 333 Bemis, Adelbert, 499 Bernis, F. A., 70, 333 Bemis, H. N., 333 Bendix, J. E., 33 Benedict, G. G., 7 Benham, H. W., 312 Benjamin, G. F., 333 Benjamin, J. P., 4 Benjamin, Samuel, 333 Bennett, Albert, 333 Bennett, B. F., 333 Bennett, E. H., 333 Bennett, E. T., 333 Bennett, F. B., 490 Bennett, Henry, 333 Bennett, Jeremiah, 333 Bennett, Nelson, 333 Bennett, Osmond, 333 Bennett, T. G., 333 Be
l authorities, and that quickly, to oust her from her position. [The Richmond has since disappeared.] The Indians and the Jayhawkers. Our Indian allies in the West have started the blood of the Jayhawkers. An express arrived at Fort Smith on the 22d from Col. Stan Watie, bringing news of a battle between a company of Cherokees, of Col. Watie's regiment, and a number of Kansas Jayhawkers, in which the Cherokees killed 26, and 3 killed of the Cherokees, one of whom was Captain James Bell, younger brother of the late well known Jack Bell. The Herald, of the 23d, learns by a letter from Camp Jackson, that the Jawhakers are becoming troublesome on the Kansas line. A company of them invaded the Osage nation a few days ago and killed Captain Matthews, a white man who was married to an Indian woman. He was a friend to the South, and it was thought that was the reason he was murdered. They also killed an Indian. There will be 3,000 Indians in Kansas in ten days that w