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Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, The Passing of the Armies: The Last Campaign of the Armies. 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: March 19, 1864., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, The Passing of the Armies: The Last Campaign of the Armies., Chapter 9: the last review. (search)
y eyes, and I thought to see no more. Following, in Dwight's Division of the Nineteenth Corps, other brave men, known and dear: a battalion of the 1st Maine Veterans, under Captain George Brown; the brigades of stalwart George Beal and clear-eyed Jim Fessenden, my college classmate; the sturdy 15th Maine from its eventful experiences of the Gulf under steadfast-hearted Isaac Dyer, Murray, and Frank Drew; soldierly Nye with the 2gth, made veterans on the Red River and Shenandoah; royal Tom Hubbard, with his 30th, once Frank Fessenden's, whom Surgeon Seth Gordon saved; a third of them now of the old 13th,--these, too, of the Red River, Sabine Cross-Roads, and Grand Ecore, and thence to the Virginia valleys; rich in experiences, romantic and Roman! And now it is the Fifth Corps. The signal sounds. Who is that mounting there? Do you see him? It is Charles Griffin. How lightly he springs to the saddle. How easy he sits, straight and slender, chin advanced, eyes to the front,
The Daily Dispatch: March 19, 1864., [Electronic resource], The Italian conspiracy against Napoleon — official Accusation of Mazzini as the "Head of the Plot." (search)
g to the 63d regiment, had given offence. Misconstrued, exaggerated, and distorted by the Abolitionists, it was resolved to gather a posse of furloughed soldiers for the purpose of removing all opposition to the Journal--a consummation most "devoutly to be wished. " Thirty or forty of these "furloughs," excited by liquor, and led on by the enemies of the Union, were induced to attack the Empire office at a time when it was well known all responsible parties were absent at dinner.--Mr. Tom Hubbard, one of the proprietors, was in the room of the second story at the time the rioters entered, and demanded their business. He was immediately assaulted, and, in defending his person, knocked some three or four of his assailants down. Others rushed to the scene, and, in his at tempt to escape, Mr. H. was thrust rudely from the window, falling a distance of some twenty or thirty feet. He was carried to the office of a physician insensible and badly injured. Stoves, types, cases