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Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War. 2 0 Browse Search
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: November 15, 1862., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War., chapter 51 (search)
ymaster, J. N. Carpenter; Acting-Ensign, E. A. Roderick; Acting-Master's Mates, W. H. Flood, H. C. Eldredge and W. L. Gilley; Engineers: Acting-First-Assistant, John F. Reilly; Acting-Second-Assistant, T. Galloway; Acting-Third-Assistants, Wm. Cornell, F. M. Dykes and T. H. Cross; Acting-Carpenter, J. C. Tier. Steamer Yankee. Acting-Volunteer Lieutenant, Edward Hooker; Acting-Assistant Paymaster, S. T. Brown; Acting-Ensign, G. D. Gilderdale; Acting-Master's Mates, H. C. Borden and Robert Robinson; Engineers: Acting-Third-Assistants, W. H. Hughes and John F. Costar. Steamer Commodore Read. Acting-Master, G. E. Hill; Acting-Assistant-Surgeon, James Wilson; Acting-Assistant Paymaster, J. J. Duffield; Acting-Ensigns, G. E. McConnell, C. Ainsworth and L. Wold; Acting-Master's Mates, Guy Morrison, E. K. Howland and G. A. Patchke; Engineers: Acting-First-Assistant, A. K. Gaul; Acting-Third-Assistants, John Westinghouse, Wesley J. Phillips and George Smith. Steamer Currituck.
Brigadier-General Ellison Capers, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 5, South Carolina (ed. Clement Anselm Evans), Additional Sketches Illustrating the services of officers and Privates and patriotic citizens of South Carolina. (search)
helped the poor and needy in those troublous times, is still remembered in the community in which he lived and died. George W. Jordan, M. D., of Rodman, Chester county, formerly surgeon in the Confederate States service, was born near his present home in 1835. His father, Uriah Jordan, was a native of South Carolina, a physician and farmer, and his grandfather, Henry Jordan, one of the early settlers of Landsford, was a native of Virginia. His mother, Margaret, was the daughter of Robert Robinson, a native of Ireland who settled in the Fishing Creek district and became a member of the legislature and county sheriff. Dr. Jordan was educated at the Mount Zion school and South Carolina college, and then entering upon the study of medicine, was graduated at the university of New York in 1859. He began the practice in his native county, but abandoned it in April, 1861, to enlist in Company A, Sixth volunteers, with which he served near Charleston. Mr. Jordan heard the first gun of
ackerel Brigade will not do anything until he gets ready. It was the want of these, as I now discover, that prevented our troops seeing the Southern Confederacy when he made his late raid across Alkwyet river. Let the spectacles be at once produced, my boy, or an indignant and bleeding nation will at once demand a change in the Cabinet. Company 3, regiments, is the only company yet fitted with glasses, and was, therefore, selected to make a reconnaissance towards Parts, under Colonel Robert Robinson, on Tuesday afternoon, for the purpose of discovering whether the Confederacies there were very tired of waiting yet. Glaring through their spectacles those gallant beings advanced until they met a Parrot shell going the other way, and then returned with hasty discipline, bringing with them a captured contraband, who was so anxious to remain in their company that he actually ran very fast. Upon regaining the camp in Accomac, my boy, the Colonel had the intelligent contraband b