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George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army (ed. George Gordon Meade), chapter 2 (search)
to Regulars and Regulars to Volunteers, etc., etc. To show you I kept sober, I have added these lines after seeing the affair out. The people in the town were rather surly, and did not at all like our cheers and toasts, some of them saying we made a great fuss about nothing; but we asked for the laurel-wreaths the ladies were preparing for Arista and his officers, and the triumphal arches that were to have been erected. June 14. I forgot to mention in yesterday's letter, that Governor Henderson, with about five hundred mounted Texans, reached here and the Governor paid his respects to the General. I was much pleased with his appearance. You know he married in Paris, Miss Coxe, the niece of Dr. Hewson. He had in his cortege Dr. Ashbell Smith, the great Texan diplomat. Among others whom he brought with him, I was much interested in a young German, Count Blucher, the nephew of the old Field Marshall, who was an editor of a paper (radical) in Berlin, but owing to some article
George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army (ed. George Gordon Meade), chapter 6 (search)
imagination, but I think getting back to camp has been decidedly beneficial, notwithstanding I arrived in a snow storm and that it has been very cold to-day. My friend Lyman had a big fire in my tent all day before I came. By-the-by, Lyman tells me his father-in-law, Mr. Russell, studied law in your father's office, and remembers you very well. If you see Colonel Bache, you can tell him Lyman is the son of his old friend, as Lyman tells me his father was Mayor of Boston and married a Miss Henderson, of New York. I have been overwhelmed with business and papers to-day. Among others, I have some fifteen applications for autographs and cartes-de-visite. Headquarters army of the Potomac, February 18, 1864. I have got quite well again; the slight cold I had in Washington has disappeared, and I have lost the sensation of weakness which I retained till I left Washington. I find there has been a good deal of pneumonia in camp. Major Barstow, on my staff, was quite sick with it
rris, Mrs., II, 144. Harrises, II, 165. Harrow, Wm., II, 87, 89. Hart, Patrick, II, 80. Hartranft, John F., I, 267. Hartsuff, G. L., I, 355; II, 164. Haupt, Herman, I, 12. Hawley, Parson, II, 152. Hays, Alexander, II, 65, 87, 100, 105, 109, 140. Hays, Harry T., II, 50, 51, 92, 93. Hays, Wm., II, 363. Hazlett, Charles E., II, 84, 331, 339. Heckman, Lewis, II, 52. Heintzelman, Samuel P., I, 250, 253, 278, 279, 284, 365. Hemper, Gen., II, 129. Henderson, Governor, I, 105. Henry, Dr., I, 363. Henry, Major, II, 276. Henry, Professor, I, 217. Henry, Wm. S., I, 168. Herberts, I, 9. Herrera, Gen., I, 34. Heth, Henry, II, 24, 26, 32, 47-50, 52, 69, 108, 129, 370. Hewson, Dr., Addinell, I, 105, 300, 303; II, 223. Hewsons, I, 9. Higgins, Thaddeus, I, 25. Hill, Dr., II, 283. Hill, Ambrose P., I, 196, 280, 286-288, 291, 293, 294, 323, 340, 386, 387; II, 16, 19. 20, 24, 25, 31, 32, 36, 41, 42, 45, 46, 48, 49, 51, 53, 5