hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore) 10 0 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 4. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for L. H. Washington or search for L. H. Washington in all documents.

Your search returned 5 results in 4 document sections:

es of the city of Richmond; the reverend clergy and Masonic and other benevolent societies, and the members of the Press. VI. At half-past 12 o'clock the procession will move from the hall by the eastern door of the capitol to the statue of Washington, on the public square, by such route as the Chief-Marshal may direct, in the following order, to wit: 1. The Chief-Marshal. 2. The Band. 3. Six members of the Committee of Arrangements, including their respective Chairmen. 4. The Pr by the Chief-Marshal for the Governors of States, the Judges, and, as far as practicable, for the other guests. The invited guests are requested to present themselves at the door of the Hall in the order above indicated. At the statue of Washington the President-elect, the Vice-President-elect, the President of the Senate, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, the officiating clergyman, confederate Judge, Governors of States, Judges of the Supreme Courts of States, the Chief-Marsha
G. T. Brooke, F. T. Chew,Wm. Carroll, John T. Walker,Barron Carter, J. A. Merriwether,J. M. Gardner, R. H. Bacot,Thos. S. Garrett, H. C. Holt,W. D. Goode, W. C. Hutter,D. G. McClintoc, Wm. P. Mason,W. R. Mays, I. C. Holcome,C. Meyer, D. M. Scales,J. M. Morgan, E. J. McDermott,R. J. Moses, Jr., D. A. Telfair,J. A. Peters, W. C. Jackson,Jeff. Phelps, W. W. Read,C. T. Sevier, Daniel Carroll,G. W. Sparks, A. S. Worth,J. M. Stafford, A. P. Bierne,H. L. Vaughn, S. S. Gregory,L. H. Washington, Daniel Trigg,C. K. Mallory, Jr., John R. Price,J. B. Ratcliffe, H. S. Cooke,J. W. Pegram, J. C. Long,G. T. Sinclair, Jr., H. C. McDaniel,M. H. Ruggles, W. F. Robinson,F. M. Harris, F. M. Thomas,W. H. Vernon, W. W. Wilkinson,Wm. Anshew, R. Flournoy,F. S. Hunter, J. S. Baldwin,L. R. Rootes, T. M. Berrien,Clarence Cary, O. A. Browne,W. P. Hamilton, W. H. Sinclair,C. W. Tyler, Palmer Saunders,R. Pinckney, W. N. Shaw,J. A. G. Williamson, W. H. Hunter,James R. Norris, S. P.
ill-advised steps will be taken; while all will admit that Government should be conservative, and not accept every ebullition of passion or expression of immature sentiment as the sober sense of the nation. To these expressions of opinion, selected from the Anti-slavery and Republican press, we may add the following endorsement of the President's policy by the New-York Journal of Commerce, a paper representing a different class of political ideas: The President adopts the views of Washington and his contemporaries, for which we have so often and so laboriously contended against much obloquy and reproach, and the principles on which the Constitution was founded, and expresses his conviction that, whatever plan be adopted, gradual emancipation would be better than immediate abolition. Good men, from the earliest days, have desired to see some plan for the removal of the slave-system, and the substitution of another labor-system in its place; and their desires would long ago hav
Doc. 132.-Rappahannock expedition. A correspondent gives the following minute account of this expedition: United States steamer Jacob Bell, off the town of Tappahannock, Rappahannock River, Va., April 16. Editor Evening Star: Having received orders from Washington, we started, April thirteenth, down the Potomac, for the Rappahannock River. When off Blackistone's Island, visited the fine frigate St. Lawrence, which lies abreast of the island at anchor. The fleet being assembled, the Jacob Bell being the flagship, Lieut. Commanding E. P. McCrae, took the lead, followed by the rest of the fleet, consisting of the Reliance, Satellite, Resolute, Island Belle and Piedmontese. At twelve o'clock at night we arrived opposite the small town of Urbana, and anchored in the morning. On the morning of April fourteenth, a boat's crew was sent ashore, under the command of Acting Master Streets, to procure a pilot. When within twenty-five yards of the beach, they were fired upon f