Your search returned 228 results in 119 document sections:

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ffJuly 16, 1872. 129,778BabcockJuly 23, 1872. 130,132HuggAug. 6, 1872. 130,365FullerAug. 13, 1872. 130,891BishopAug. 27, 1872. 131,206ArmstrongSept. 10, 1872. 132,018MooreOct. 8, 1872. 132,148DoranOct. 15, 1872. 8.Tuck Creasers and Markers. (continued). No.Name.Date. 134,966BabcockJan. 21, 1873. 135,065BarnumJan. 21, 1873. 135,078CarpenterJan. 21, 1873. 135,919JohnstonFeb. 18, 1873. 137,108StewartMar. 25, 1873. 138,635GoodrichMay 6, 1873. 138, 636GoodrichMay 6, 1873. 139,249KaneMay 27, 1873. 141,095TilestoneJuly 22, 1873. 143,741BabcockOct. 21, 1873. 143,975FaulknerOct. 28, 1873. 146,094PowellDec. 30, 1873. 152,948HenryJuly 14, 1874. 154,052JonesAug. 11, 1874. 157,649StewartDec. 8, 1874. 157,933Sampson et al.Dec. 22, 1874. 158,576DetweilerJan. 12, 1875. (Reissue.)6,316GoodrichMar. 2, 1875. 9. Tuckers and Plaiters. 16,429BishopJan. 20, 1857. 27,029AllenFeb. 7, 1860. 29,856BradySept. 4, 1860. 35,667BlakeJan. 24, 1862. 40,657BollmanNov. 17, 1863. 57
Emilio, Luis F., History of the Fifty-Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry , 1863-1865, Roster of the Fifty-Fourth Massachusetts Infantry. (search)
; Springfield. 4 Mch 63; missing 18 Jly 63 Ft Wagner. $50. Jones, Henry E. 19, sin.; farmer; Lanesborough. 30 Nov 63; 20 Aug 65. $325. Jones, William Henry 44, mar.; store keeper; Boston. 10 Feb 64; 22 Sep 64 Morris Id. S. C.; dis. $50. Kane, Charles 28, sin.; laborer; Buffalo, N. Y. 28 Mch 63; died of wound 15 Aug 63 Gen. Hos. Beaufort, S. C. Wounded 18 Jly 63 Ft Wagner. $50. Kelsey, Joseph 22, mar.; laborer; Peru. 17 Dec. 63; died 4 May 65 Regtl. Hos. Georgetown, S. C. of diseas63; died 7 Jly 64 Beaufort, S. C. of disease. $50. Jones, Robert Mus. 20, sin.; laborer; Lancaster Co. Pa. 19 Mch 63; died 10 May 65 Beaufort S. C. of disease. $50. Jordan, Wiley 29, sin.; engineer; Mercer Co., O. 12 May 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Kane, Robert Corpl. 21, sin.; laborer; Lancaster Co. Pa. 19 Mch 63; 20 Aug 65. $50. Kennard, William H. 20, sin.; farmer; Lancaster Co. Pa. 21 Mch 63; 29 May 65 St. Andrews Parish, S. C.; dis. $50. Knox, Thomas E. 21, sin.; barber; Hollidaysburg
and there met a prominent and reliable gentleman from Baltimore, who was well acquainted with Marshal Kane, then the chief of police. I was anxious to ascertain whether he was loyal and reliable, and made particular inquiries upon both these points. I was assured that Kane was perfectly reliable; whereupon I made known some of the facts that had come to my knowledge in reference to the designs for the burning of the bridges, and requested that they should be laid before Marshal Kane, with a request that he should detail a police force to make the necessary investigation. Marshal Kane was seMarshal Kane was seen, and it was suggested to him that there were reports of a conspiracy to burn the bridges and cut off Washington; and his advice was asked as to the best way of ferreting out the conspirators. He s the slightest foundation for such rumors. I then determined to have nothing more to do with Marshal Kane, but to investigate the matter in my own way, and at once sent for a celebrated detective, wh
of indefinite submission. It passed resolutions protesting against the military occupation of the State by the Federal Government, and indicating sympathy with the South, but concluding with the declaration: Under existing circumstances, it is inexpedient to call a sovereign Convention of the State at this time, or take any measures for the immediate organization or arming of the militia. Baltimore was rapidly brought under the yoke. By a concerted movement of the Federal authorities, Col. Kane, the marshal of police, was arrested; the Police Board suspended; a provost-marshal appointed, and Baltimore brought under the law of the drum-head. The municipal police were disbanded, and a reign of terror threatened to establish itself in what was already a condition of anarchy. The writ of habeas corpus was suspended; the houses of suspected persons were searched; blank warrants were issued for domiciliary visits; and the mayor and members of the police board were arrested, and, wit
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 7 (search)
fact. It is, that not only is the slave statute held to be law, but that there is really no law beside it in the Free States,--to execute it, all other laws are set aside and disregarded. The commonest and best settled principles have been trodden under foot. Almost all these persons have been arrested by a lie. Sims was,--Long was,--Preston was. In the case at Buffalo, the man was arrested by a bloodthirsty attack,--knocked down in the streets. The atrocious haste, the brutal haste of Judge Kane, in the case of Hannah Kellam, language fails in describing,--indignation stands dumb before the cold and brutal wickedness. Many of these cases have been a perversion, not only of all justice, but of all law. Take a single and slight instance. The merciful and safe rule has always been, that an officer, arresting any one wrongfully, shall not be permitted to avail himself of his illegal act for the service of a true warrant while he has the man in custody. This would be not only a san
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 9 (search)
as such, that he took the official oath. It follows, then, that if Marshal Freeman should direct Judge Loring to aid in catching a slave, and he should refuse, the House of Representatives could impeach him for official misconduct. I think no one but a Slave Commissioner will maintain that this is law. Mr. Loring contends that he was bound to issue the warrant, holding as he did the office of Commissioner! Who obliged him to hold the office? Could he not have resigned, as many — young Kane of Philadelphia, and others-did, when first the infamous act made it possible that he should be insulted by an application for such a warrant? There was a time when all of us would have deemed such an application an insult to Edward G. Loring. Could he not have resigned when the application was made, as Captain Hayes of our police did, when called on to aid in doing the very act which Mr. Loring had brought like a plague on the city? Could he not have declined to issue the warrant or take
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 10 (search)
passed away, may it not be till his glad ear has caught the jubilee of the emancipated millions whom his life has been given to save! This very Female Antislavery Society which was met here twenty years ago did other good service but a few months after, in getting the Court of Massachusetts to recognize that great principle of freedom, that a slave, brought into a Northern State, is free. It was in the well-known Med case. We owe that to the Boston Female Antislavery Society. To-day, Judge Kane, and the Supreme Court, which alone can control him, are endeavoring to annihilate that principle which twenty years ago was established. How far and how soon they may be successful, God only knows. Truly, as Mr. Garrison has said, the intellectual and moral growth of antislavery has been great within twenty years; but who shall deny that, in the same twenty years, the political, the organic, the civil growth of slavery has been more than equal? We stand here to-day with a city redeem
Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 19 (search)
we broke with England. Timid men wept; but now we see how such disunion was gain, peace, and virtue. Indeed, seeming disunion was real union. We were then two snarling hounds, leashed together; we are now one in a true marriage, one in blood, trade, thought, religion, history, in mutual love and respect; where one then filched silver from the other, each now pours gold into the other's lap; our only rivalry, which shall do most honor to the blood of Shakespeare and Milton, of Franklin and Kane. In that glass we see the story of North and South since 1787, and I doubt not for all coming time. The people of the States between the Gulf and the great Lakes, yes, between the Gulf and the Pole, are essentially one. We are one in blood, trade, thought, religion, history; nothing can long divide us. If we had let our Constitution grow, as the English did, as oaks do, we had never passed through such scenes as the present. The only thing that divides us now, is the artificial attempt,
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Chapter 2: the Worcester period (search)
an of eighty-six plan his life from month to month. That year Dr. Kane and Dr. Hayes, the Arctic explorers, claimed public attention. Feused to say, so I take naps and gymnasium and read the fascinating Dr. Kane. I do believe Robinson Crusoe will have to give place hereafter, and that boys will keep some small edition of Dr. Kane instead of Baron Trench in their school desks. I seldom read of anything which I do at might have been; for instance, she might have been the wife of Dr. Kane; and what would he have done with her in the Arctic regions? Thatple and quite graphic. He always said we and referred but once to Dr. Kane, speaking of the brave heart of our commander. The most novel at pleasing part of it was his description of their separation from Dr. Kane. This he did not speak of as a thing requiring apology, but he did not give the explanation given by Dr. Kane, or rather added it, as part of their plan, to remain at the Esquimaux settlements and supply the
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Letters and Journals of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Index. (search)
, and Kansas, 138, 139; death of, 230, 231. Howell, Mrs., of Philadelphia, 145. Howells, Wm. Dean, 262. Hughes, Thomas, described, 258,259. Hunt, Helen, 244-46. Hunt, William, the artist, 31, 32. Hunter, Gen., David, described, 198; and Jefferson Davis, 205. Hurlbut, William Henry, his:foreign experiences, 29-33. J Jacksonville, Fla., 185-91, 194-97. Johnson, Robert U., 235. Johnson, Samuel, letters to, 14-17, 51. Jowett, Master, of Balliol, visit to, 286. K Kane, Dr. Elisha K., Arctic explorer, 90-92. Kansas, emigrants and money sent to, 137-39; Higginson's trip to, 139-44. Kemble, Mrs., Fanny, 35-37, 218. Kensett, John F., the artist, 147. Kimball, Capt., 177. King, Clarence, 274. Koven, Rev. Henry de, 261. L La Farge, John, the artist, 226, 227. Lander, Mrs. F. W., 205, 206; sketch of, 201, 202. Lane, Gen. James H., of Kansas, 143, 144. Lazarus, Emma, 266. Lewis, Dio, 249. Lincoln, Abraham, 164; and Fremont, 160; anec
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