VI., 320.
Blaine, J. G.,
IX., 292.
Blake, G. A. H.,
IV., 47.
Blake, H. C.,
VI., 316.
Blake's Mill, Ga.,
IV., 332.
Blakely guns
V., 56, 120.
Blanchard, A. G.,
X., 271.
Bledsoe's battery, Confederate, I., 350, 352, 356, 358.
Blemiel, Father
Vii., 272.
Blenheim, losses at, X., 140.
Blenker, L.,
I., 311; V., 292.
Blennerhasset Island, O., II., 340.
Block houses: on Nashville & Chattanooga R. R., IV., 149; garrisoned against Wheeler's cavalry, IV., 151.
Blockade: I., 89; the early inadequacy of, VI., 14; Confederate hope of raising, VI., 15; beginning at Pensacola, VI., 19; steam vessels available for, VI., 22; effectiveness of, in 1861-2, VI., 26; foreign vessels, VI., 33; final completeness of, VI., 34; completed by fall of Fort Fisher, VI., 39; value of vessels captured or destroyed by, VI., 40; viewed from dramatic standpoint, VI., 40; first Confederate vessel to run, VI., 75; in the Potomac, VI., 92, 101; str
S., III., 86; V., 132; Hardee's, W. J., III., 318; V., 70; Hill's, D. H., II., 230; Hood's, J. B., V., 48; Jackson's, T. J., Stonewall, II., 63, 322, 324; Longstreet's. J., II., 322, 321, 344, 346, 348; V., 72; Polks, L. K., II., 330, 314; V., 70; Price's, Sterling, II., 324; Cavalry, of the Army of Northern Virginia, IV., 76-114; Engineer, loss of records, V., 256; works around Richmond, Va., V., 260; Engineers, Virginia, V., 256, 258; Third Corps, artillery equipment, V., 70; VIII., 166; Wheeler's Corps, X. 268.
Corps D'afrique,
II., 205.
Correspondents, War, VIII., 293.
Corse, J. M.,
II., 304; III., 216, 218; X., 89.
Corse, M. D. X 317.
Corydon Ind.
IV., 134.
Coryphoeus,, U. S. S.,
II., 330.
Coston signals
Viii., 316.
Cotton, , C. S. S.,
II., 330.
Cotton: exports of, by the South in 1860 and 1861, VI., 26; increased value of, VI., 123; importance of, to Confederacy in ‘61, VI., 30, 32.
Cotton plant, Ark.
(see also Bayou Cac
pital, III., 153; cavalry, its successful operations in the Valley in 1864, III., 167; abundance versus Southern starvation, III., 182; recruits, city and country, compared, III., 272, 273; and Confederate armies, losses of, in the war, III., 347; supplies, great wealth of, August, 1862, IV., 95; fleet steaming up the Alabama River, IV., 138; blockhouses along railroads as means of protection to lines of communication, IV., 149, 151; loss of supplies, estimation of, in the great raid by General Wheeler, IV., 164; ammunition-train, right of way afforded to, IV., 216-217; cavalry completely subordinated to infantry in first half of war, IV., 220; ram flotilla, VI., 314; surgeons-general and their work, VII., 347, 348; fleet bombarded by Confederate battery, VIII., 107; soldiers, 1865, IX., 329; percentage tables of losses in battles, X., 124; armies, losses, X., 148; army tabular statements of, X., 150; army, regimental casualties of, X., 152 seq.; casualties of regiments during entire
moving photographic outfit used by Brady, etc., I., 46; its uses, VIII., 25.
Wheat, C. R.,
I., 362.
Wheat and corn crops in 1861, VIII., 46.
Wheaton, F.,
X., 305.
Wheeler, J.:
II., 168, 170, 326, 328,330, 344, 346, 348; III., 108, 211, 230, 232, 246, 31S, 330, 338, 342; IV., 36, 144. 145, 147, 149 seq., 151; blockhouses garrisoned against raids by, IV., 151, 158, 160, 162, 161, 254, 262, 279 seq., 288 seq.; VIII., 275, 290, 362; IX., 322, 327, 328; X., 249, 268.
Wheeler, J. C.,
V., 65.
When Johnny Comes marching Home.
P. S. Gilmore, IX., 235, 339, 342.
When Lilacs last in the Dooryard Bloom'd,
Walt Whitman, IX., 24, 254.
When this Cruel War is over,
C. C. Sawyer, IX., 235, 350, 351.
Whipple, A. W.:
II., 334; X., 131.
Whistling Dick,
II., 187, 195.
White, D.,
X., 211.
White, E. D.,
X., 24.
White, E. J.:
I., 89; VII., 4, 59.
White, I. H.,
VII., 86.
White, J.,
X., 201.
White, J. L.,
V., 170.