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The Daily Dispatch: March 11, 1862., [Electronic resource] 4 0 Browse Search
Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 2 0 Browse Search
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 20. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones) 2 0 Browse Search
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Your search returned 8 results in 4 document sections:

Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), New Jersey, (search)
epublican Senators force their way into the Senate chamber......Jan. 10, 1894 Supreme Court of New Jersey decides that the Republican Senate is lawful......March 21, 1894 Republican Senate recognized as the legal Senate......March 22, 1894 William Walter Phelps dies at Englewood......June 17, 1894 Railroad accident near Atlantic City, forty-seven killed and seventy injured......July 31, 1896 George M. Robeson, ex-Secretary of the Navy, dies at Trenton......Sept. 27, 1897 Vice-President Hobart dies at Paterson, N. J.......Nov. 21, 1899 Andrew Carnegie gives $50,000 to East Orange for a public library; William M. Johnson $40,000 to Hackensack, Charles Danforth $20,000 to Paterson; Dr. William Sticker $100,000 to Orange......1900 Carnegie Company incorporated with a capital of $160,000,000......March 24, 1900; North German Lloyd's piers in Hoboken burned (several hundred lives lost and property valued at $10,000,000 destroyed)......June 30, 1900 New Mexico
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 20. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Reunion of Company D. First regiment Virginia Cavalry, C. S. A. (search)
D. C. Gray. C. P. Gray. James Gray, dead. J. A. Gallehon. Melville Gammon, wounded. Robert Grant. William H. Hall, dead. John D. Hall. A. Findlay Harris. John Hockett. William Hockett. Samuel Hockett. R. M. Hickman. George Hughlett, dead. Basil Home. ——Hubble. M. M. S. Ireson. David Jones (captured and hung by enemy, and Colonel Mosby hung seven of the enemy in retaliation). Jasper S. Jones. Robert Jones, killed. Henry S. Jones, wounded. William M. Johnson. M. G. Keesling. Robert J. Keller, dead. H. G. King. ——King. M. H. Latham. L. W. Latham. John Larrimore. B. D. Ligon. David Lowry. David Lynch, dead. D. K. H. Lewark, dead. John Littleford. Willis Littleford. S. D. Meek. James R. Meek. Putnam C. Miles, killed. W. F. Montgomery, wounded. Lilburn Montgomery. William Morell, killed. David Morell, killed. Charles Morell. J. L. Morrison. Leander McNew. Tobias McNew, dead. George McN
, after the reading of the Journal of Saturday, Mr.Stephens presented a letter from Mr. Dixon, which he requested to be read and referred to the Committee on Postal The communication referred to the transmission of melis on the Sabbath, and advocated that mail carriers be exempted from duty on Sunday. Mr. Baker, of Florida, asked leave of absence for his colleague, Mr. Maxwell, who was obliged to leave for home on Saturday. Mr. Douton of North Carolina, presented a claim from Wm. M. Johnson, for services rendered Government, and moved it be laid on the table. Mr. Henry of Tenn., presented petition from $10 ladies of Tennessee, asking that a law may be passed to prevent the distillation of grain. It was referred to the Military Committee. Mr. Barnwell, of South Carolina, reported back a bill from the Committee on Accounts, and desired that the committee be released from further consideration of it. The bill related to the proper method of auditing the accounts of
Mr. Atkins, of Tennessee, desired to say a word in support of the resolution of his colleague. He thought an investigation entirely proper with reference to the conduct of our officers in Kentucky and Tennessee. He was sorry, however, that the debate upon this resolution was a public one, and expressed the opinion that the investigation should have been in secret session. He had no feeling against any of the officers whose conduct it was proposed to investigate; no feeling against Gen. Johnson; but he would be recreant to his trust, to the people of Tennessee, and to the people of the Confederate States, if he failed to bear testimony to the incompetency and gross mismanagement which had characterized the command of our army in the West. He thought the great interests of the country demanded an investigation. Gen Johnston had command of our forces there, and he had proven himself incompetent, and it was well enough to imitate the example of the Lincoln Congress, when a man lo