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ovement he set an example to his men that nerved them to the task. I could detail a thousand interesting incidents, but must defer until my next. The following are the names of the prisoners taken. They are from Arkansas and Virginia. Of Col. Rust's Third Arkansas regiment--J. W. Brooks, J. Garian, (slightly wounded,) J. G. Carter, G. S. Harris, all privates. Of Col. Jackson's Thirty-first Virginia regiment-- First Sergeant Andy Husman, James Alford, George P. Morgan, Evan Evans, G. Thompson, Thomas West, P. Wolf, Solomon Gainer, and J. H. Nay, all privates except the last, who was a teamster, and undertook to have a little fight. These, with a number of others at Beverly, will be immediately sent to Ohio. The following is a list of the killed and wounded on the Federal side: Howe's Artillery--James Enyart and George L. Price, killed; Andrew Dougherty, arm shot off; M. Leedridge and Corporal Andrews, wounded. Ninth Indiana------Smith, of Company II, killed; Isaac Bryant,
in leg; Wm. McKinnon, in finger. Company I--Lieut. M. A. Shaw, in foot; Corporal Wm. R. Duncklee, in head; privates, L. C. Parker, in side; M. Tully, in leg; H. Butler, in back; K. J. Chaplin, in head. Company K--Privates, H. Hunnefelt, in finger; J. F. Welch. Total wounded, thirty-four. missing — John F. Mulligan, shot through leg, and not since heard from, company F; company H, privates, Alvah Warren, Henry M. Woodbury; company K, privates John K. A. Hanson, John Harmon, Henry G. Thompson. Total missing, six. officers absent from tie battle.--Surgeon George B. Twitchell, detained at Washington; Captain N. D. Stoodley, sick in Washington; Captain Luther M. Wright, sick in quarters; Lieutenant G. Gillis, Adjutant, sick, and on furlough in Nashua, N. H., Lieutenant Edward Kilburn, sick in Alexandria; Lieutenant W. H. H. Young, sick in quarters. Major Houghton's report. headquarters Third regiment Michigan volunteers, camp Pitcher, Va., December 18, 1862. Captain G.
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 2, Chapter 1: the Boston mob (second stage).—1835. (search)
cause in public with subtle sophists and insolent scoffers? It is true, we have the lion-hearted, invincible Weld, at the West, and our strong and indefatigable T. D. Weld. brother Stanton in Rhode Island; but the withdrawal of H. B. Stanton. Thompson seems like the loss of many agents. . . . By the way—looking at the thing in its true light, this custom of appointing one day in the year to be specially thankful for the good gifts of God is an absurdity, tending, I think, to keep up the noon. Brooklyn, December 5, 1835. Ms. Your safe arrival at Boston has removed a load of anxiety from all our minds, and filled us with joy . . . . The Liberator was received yesterday, and its contents eagerly and critically perused. Bro. Thompson's farewell Lib. 5.195. letter is most happily conceived, and powerfully expressed, and well calculated to revive the hearts of our abolition brethren. With what alarm and fury will our enemies read his promise to expose their baseness and crue
1.383; stirs up mob against G., 381, 387, and Thompson, 446, 451, and abolitionists generally, 447; Faneuil Hall meeting, 1.481, 497; censured by Thompson, 2.83, by G., 384. Cox, Samuel Hanson, Rev388; rebuffed by Clarkson, 364; maligns G. to Thompson, 435; forwards British Colon. memorial, 303;s at Exeter Hall meeting, 368; delicacy as to Thompson, 444; female coadjutors, 2.367; death and G.'alem), communications from G., 1.54; abuse of Thompson, 440; some manliness, 521. Genius of Unive. Holst, Hermann von [b. 1841], censure of Thompson, 1.439. Homer, James L., excites Boston moall, David T., 1.394. Kimball, John S., buys Thompson's portrait, 2.68; at Mrs. Chapman's, 105. 427; welcome to Roxbury, 428; at Groton with Thompson, 451, 452; literary style, 461; A. S. labors igns protest against Colon. Soc., 361; urges Thompson to the law, 436. Sterling, John M. [b. Febes A., leaves Lane Seminary, 1.454, 2.327. Thompson, George [b. Liverpool, June 18, 1804; d. Leed[24 more...]
Francis Jackson Garrison, William Lloyd Garrison, 1805-1879; the story of his life told by his children: volume 3, Chapter 6: third mission to England.—1846. (search)
uld remark, that he always enjoyed seeing a man running after his hat! (Ms. June 19, 1883, Alfred Webb to F. J. G.) Thompson and Douglass greeted him on October 10 in Liverpool, and took him directly to Wrexham, in Wales, Lib. 17.11. to meet an 16.187; Ms. Oct. 24, 1846, W. L. G. to R. D. Webb. of the great port, a meeting at Concert Hall went off famously, with Thompson in the chair as President of the League. Scotland was again royally scoured, in parts already gone over (with a superperform much, fully to deserve them. A breakfast by invitation with George Combe, perhaps on Oct. 22, in company with Thompson, Douglass, and Buffum, was another pleasurable incident of this visit to Edinburgh ( Life of Douglass, ed. 1882, p. 245)night before expressly to bid him farewell at the house of Richard Rathbone, waved him their long adieus. The voices of Thompson and Webb and H. C. Wright swelled the cheering led by Frederick Douglass. More than twenty years would elapse before th
The Daily Dispatch: January 22, 1864., [Electronic resource], The Federal Spy system in great Britain (search)
The Federal Spy system in great Britain We copy the following affidavit from the London Index. It was made by one of the workmen employed by J. & G. Thompson, shipbuilders at Glasgow. It was made in reference to the attempt made by the Yankee spies to suborn them to give evidence that might be used against the steamer Pampero: "On the 17th day of October last Mr. Archibald Brodie, formerly carver and gilder, Buchanan street, Glasgow, called at my house in Govan, proposing to sell carved trusses, &c. On the Tuesday following he called again about the trusses: but before he left he introduced the subject of the steamship Pampero, when he proposed that I should call on him at Balloch to inspect the trusses. I did not go to Balloch. On the evening of the23d of October last, on going home from work, I found him waiting for me at my house. After waiting some time. I accompanied him on leaving, when he proposed we should adjourn to a tavern in Govan. When there he again intr