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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
ity was not resisted. But in the meantime the seventh car having come up to the obstruction, the driver hitched the horses to the other end and returned rapidly to President street, the cars following of course reversing and also returning amid a shower of stones and other missles and hoots and yells of defiance. March to Camden Station. There were now at President Street Station four companies of the Massachusetts Regiment, C, D, I and L, under Captains Follonsbee, Hart, Pickering and Dike. They were cut off from their colonel and the rest of the command. In these four companies were 220 men, who were confronted by a dense and angry crowd, cheering for Jeff. Davis and the Confederacy, and denouncing Lincoln and the North. The unarmed Pennsylvanians and the regimental band remained in the railroad station, but the four Massachusetts companies formed on President street and began their famous march to Camden Station. As they marched up President street the commotion increased
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.29 (search)
ity was not resisted. But in the meantime the seventh car having come up to the obstruction, the driver hitched the horses to the other end and returned rapidly to President street, the cars following of course reversing and also returning amid a shower of stones and other missles and hoots and yells of defiance. March to Camden Station. There were now at President Street Station four companies of the Massachusetts Regiment, C, D, I and L, under Captains Follonsbee, Hart, Pickering and Dike. They were cut off from their colonel and the rest of the command. In these four companies were 220 men, who were confronted by a dense and angry crowd, cheering for Jeff. Davis and the Confederacy, and denouncing Lincoln and the North. The unarmed Pennsylvanians and the regimental band remained in the railroad station, but the four Massachusetts companies formed on President street and began their famous march to Camden Station. As they marched up President street the commotion increased