Browsing named entities in Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies. You can also browse the collection for Hatch or search for Hatch in all documents.

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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies, 1862. (search)
efore a good fire and looking up at the stars, as the noises of men and horses subside, and you hear nothing but the measured tread of the sentry, and the crackling of the big logs on the fire, till you fall into a sound sleep, and dream of home. Or perhaps you are awakened by firing from the pickets, and without any confusion or bustle an order is given, and a dark column uncoils swiftly from the dense mass of men and horses and starts out in the direction of the firing. May, 1864. Hatch, who was killed, was my company farrier, and a first-rate man; we buried him the next day at Vienna. The Chaplain was absent, and I performed the service; the band playing Taps as we lowered the coffin into the grave. I could not help crying. The incident so briefly alluded to in the last extract, we have learned from others, was one which revealed his character more deeply than any other to his brother officers and his men. In the discharge of what he took upon himself as his duty,—th
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies, 1863. (search)
Company L bore date October 31, 1861; his commission as First Lieutenant, May 3, 1862; and his commission as Captain, October 24, 1862. His regiment passed much of its early career in camp near Annapolis, Maryland, under the command of Brigadier-General Hatch, United States Volunteers, a very energetic and agreeable man, as Barker wrote, who superintends in person, and instructs and suggests when he sees the officers at a loss. Although convinced of the necessity of drilling and discipliningdy was never recovered. A writer in the Boston Daily Advertiser for December 4, 1865, under date of Charleston, November 25th, gives the following account of the battle:— Your readers may remember that Major-General Foster despatched General Hatch with some four thousand men, in November last, to cut the Charleston and Savannah Railroad, and offer another objective point to Sherman, then coming from Atlanta shoreward. The expedition landed at Boyd's Neck, on Broad River, and marched i
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Harvard Memorial Biographies, Biographical Index. (search)
Harris, Henrietta, I. 45. Hartsuff, G. L., Gen., 1. 26; II. 50, 222;. Hartwell, A. S., Brig.-Gen., . . 404; II. 370, 371;--378, 379, 380,462. Harwood, Walter, I. 94. Haskell, L. F., Brig.-Gen., II. 416. Hassam, J. T., II. 375. Hatch, Private, II. 327. Hatch, J. P., Brig.-Gen., II. 357, 370;. Haven, Elizabeth, II. 275. Haven, J. H., II. 275, 290;. Haven, Samuel, Hon., I. 179. Haven, Samuel, Rev., II. 275. Haven, S. C., Lieut., Memoir, II. 275-284. Haven, Hatch, J. P., Brig.-Gen., II. 357, 370;. Haven, Elizabeth, II. 275. Haven, J. H., II. 275, 290;. Haven, Samuel, Hon., I. 179. Haven, Samuel, Rev., II. 275. Haven, S. C., Lieut., Memoir, II. 275-284. Haven, S. F., I. 179. Haven, S. F., Jr., Surgeon, Memoir, I. 179-188. Also, I. 238. Haviland, T. P., Lieut., I. 27. Hayden, Harriet M., I. 99. Hayden, Private, II., 427. Hayes, F. B., II. 199. Hayes, Joseph, Major, I. 330; II. 203. 218. Haygood, Brig.-Gen. (Rebel service), II. 198. Hayward, Nathan, Dr., I. 118,185, 424. Heath,??? H., II. 8. Heath, W. H., Dr., II. 261. Heckman, C. A., Brig.-Gen., 1. 40. Hedges, H. N., II. 438. hedges, J. N., Memoir, II. 438. H