Browsing named entities in The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 8: Soldier Life and Secret Service. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller). You can also browse the collection for J. B. Howard or search for J. B. Howard in all documents.

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own officers, eye-witnesses to the presence of the foe in force, as when Jackson circled Pope and dashed upon his communications at Manassas; when Longstreet loomed up against his left at Second Bull Run, and when Jackson again circled Hooker and Howard and crushed the exposed right flank at Chancellorsville. Be that as it may, there is no doubt that from the very dawn of the war until its lurid and dramatic close, the Southern leaders had infinitely the advantage in the matter of information. h had played so important a part in all the aggressive movements of the troops, should have a place in the Grand Review. Supplies on the Tennessee Brandy Station, Va. New York ferry on the Potomac Stores at Stoneman's station Col. J. B. Howard, Q. M. Sibley, wall, and a tents Supplies at White House Army bread Supplies at City Point Grand review at Washington Repair shops. During the progress of the war, repair shops were established by the Federal Governme
o Burnside's orders, they had stormed the heights of Fredericksburg in the face of Lee's veterans, laying down their lives in what they knew was hopeless battle. Confident in their numbers, in their valor, in their comrades, and hopeful of their new and buoyant commander, they had crossed above Fredericksburg, while Sedgwick menaced from the north, and then, worst fate of all, had found themselves tricked and turned, their right wing sent whirling before Stonewall Jackson, whom Hooker and Howard had thought to be in full retreat for the mountains, their far superior force huddled in helpless confusion and then sent back, sore-hearted, to the camps from which they had come. They The birth of base-ball: an army of boys. Some of the men who went home on furlough in 1862 returned to their regiments with tales of a marvelous new game which was spreading through the Northern States. In Camp at White Oak Church near Falmouth, Va., Kearny's Jersey brigade and Bartlett's brigade