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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
for Washington were hauled by horses, one car at a time, from President Street Station up to Pratt, along Pratt to Howard street, and thence ing the soldiers consisted of thirty-five cars. It arrived at President Street Station about 11 o'clock on the morning of Friday, 19th of Apr of defiance. March to Camden Station. There were now at President Street Station four companies of the Massachusetts Regiment, C, D, I came of the collision on the march. The Mayor hurried toward President Street Station, and when he reached Pratt street bridge he met the bao'clock A. M., when I saw the first car containing troops from President Street Station pass through. Hearing that the troops were the Seventntime the unarmed Pennsylvania recruits which had been left at President Street Station, were in a deplorable dilemma. They were surrounded bice stations and begged for protection. Those who remained in President Street Station were later on put on cars and hauled out of town towar
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.29 (search)
for Washington were hauled by horses, one car at a time, from President Street Station up to Pratt, along Pratt to Howard street, and thence ing the soldiers consisted of thirty-five cars. It arrived at President Street Station about 11 o'clock on the morning of Friday, 19th of Apr of defiance. March to Camden Station. There were now at President Street Station four companies of the Massachusetts Regiment, C, D, I came of the collision on the march. The Mayor hurried toward President Street Station, and when he reached Pratt street bridge he met the bao'clock A. M., when I saw the first car containing troops from President Street Station pass through. Hearing that the troops were the Seventntime the unarmed Pennsylvania recruits which had been left at President Street Station, were in a deplorable dilemma. They were surrounded bice stations and begged for protection. Those who remained in President Street Station were later on put on cars and hauled out of town towar