Your search returned 8 results in 4 document sections:

Frederick H. Dyer, Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Battles, Texas, 1862 (search)
1862 Feb. 11-13: Operations at Aransas PassU. S. Navy. April 5-6: Affair, San Luis PassU. S. Navy. May 14-15: Operations at GalvestonU. S. Navy. Aug. 10: Affair on Neuces River, near Fort ClarkeTEXAS--Loyalists. Union loss, 2 killed, 18 wounded, 2 missing. Total, 22. Aug. 11: Affair, VelascoU. S. Navy. Aug. 16-18: Bombardment, Corpus ChristiU. S. Navy. Sept. 13-14: Operations at Flour Bluff near Corpus ChristiU. S. Navy. Sept. 24-25: Engagement, Sabine PassU. S. Navy. Oct. 5: Capture of GalvestonU. S. Navy. Oct. 29: Affair, Sabine PassU. S. Navy. Dec. 24: Occupation of GalvestonMASSACHUSETTS--42d Infantry.
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Memoir of Jane Claudia Johnson. (search)
duty at Fort Leavenworth, Fort Des Moines, Fort Gibson, Mo., Fort Coffee, Kan., and numerous forts in Florida, until in 1843 he was stationed at camp Barrancas, Pensacola harbor, where he became acquainted with his future wife, her father being in command of a detail of the Seventh Regiment of United States Infantry, occupying the harbor defences—Forts Pickens and McRae. In the August after his marriage he accompanied his command to Aransas and Corpus Christi, on the Texas boundary, the Neuces river, preparatory to the movement to the Rio Grande, and commencement of the Mexican war. For two years he was at Carmago, on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande. Having attained his promotion as surgeon at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., he was ordered to duty with the troops which went as advance guard across the plains before the great emigration of 1849, and was en route to, and on duty at, Fort Laramie, Ore., now Wyoming Territory, until August, 1851. In January, 1852, he was again ordered to
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 29. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Dr. Samuel P. Moore. (search)
duty at Fort Leavenworth, Fort Des Moines, Fort Gibson, Mo., Fort Coffee, Kan., and numerous forts in Florida, until in 1843 he was stationed at camp Barrancas, Pensacola harbor, where he became acquainted with his future wife, her father being in command of a detail of the Seventh Regiment of United States Infantry, occupying the harbor defences—Forts Pickens and McRae. In the August after his marriage he accompanied his command to Aransas and Corpus Christi, on the Texas boundary, the Neuces river, preparatory to the movement to the Rio Grande, and commencement of the Mexican war. For two years he was at Carmago, on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande. Having attained his promotion as surgeon at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., he was ordered to duty with the troops which went as advance guard across the plains before the great emigration of 1849, and was en route to, and on duty at, Fort Laramie, Ore., now Wyoming Territory, until August, 1851. In January, 1852, he was again ordered to
Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas a town of 600 pop., on Corpus Christi Bay, at the mouth of Neuces River, 230 miles W. by S. of Galveston. It has consider able commerce.