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Henry Morton Stanley, Dorothy Stanley, The Autobiography of Sir Henry Morton Stanley 7 1 Browse Search
The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Index (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller) 2 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: April 27, 1861., [Electronic resource] 1 1 Browse Search
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Henry Morton Stanley, Dorothy Stanley, The Autobiography of Sir Henry Morton Stanley, part 1.4, chapter 1.13 (search)
rm, not far from the doorway, and my mate was a young sprig of Mississippi nobility named W. H. Wilkes (a nephew of Admiral C. Wilkes, U. S. Navy, the navigator, and captor of Mason and Slidell, Confederate Commissioners). Mr. Shipman soon after ded, the cooks had departed contented, and the quarters swept, I proceeded to my nest and reclined alongside of my friend Wilkes, in a posture that gave me a command of one-half of the building. I made some remarks to him upon the card-playing group closed my eyes. I was still in the same reclining attitude, the groups opposite were still engaged in their card games, Wilkes was in the same position. Nothing had changed. I asked, What has happened? What could happen? said he. What makeene, projected on my mind's screen, across four thousand five hundred miles of space, is one of these mysteries. After Wilkes and I had thoroughly acquainted ourselves with all the evil and the good to be found at Camp Douglas, neither of us saw a
Union and Confederate losses in engagements on both sides, III., 92, 318; IV., 33, 98, 197, 239; V., 21, 27, 54, 214; VII., 154, 230, 268, 270; VIII., 63; Sixth Vermont at, VIII., 65, 173, 175, 177; Orange plank road, VIII., 177; soldiers' graves at, VIII., 177, 191, 204, 246, 329,367; battle of, IX., 139, 155, 261 graves in the, IX., 283; in 1864, X., 61; losses at, X., 124. Wilderness Church, Va., II., 117. Wilderness Tavern, Va., III., 17, 36, 40. Wiles, Mr. X., 19. Wilkes, C., VI., 125, 291, 293, 310. Wilkie, Lieut. VIII., 115. Wilkinson, James Ix., 285. Wilkinson, John Vi., 108, 124. Wilkinson, M. S., I., 147. Willcox, O. B.: II., 100; III., 90, 282; headquarters at Petersburg, Va., VIII., 243; IX., 266; X.,185, 208. Williams, A., II., 324. Williams, A. S.: I., 231 seq., 306; II., 70; III., 347; X., 85, 189,216. Williams, D. H., X., 291. Williams, H. H., Jr. VIII., 117. Williams, J., VI., 98. Wi
, W. A. Spotswood, L. W. Minor, J. T. Mason, R. F. Mason, J. F. Harrison, W. E. Carrington, C. H. Williamson, A. Lynch. Assistant Surgeons.--H. W. M. Washington, A. S. Garnett, T. J. Charlton. Paymaster.--R. T. Allison. Seventy-two Southern midshipmen from the Naval School. On the return of the ships from distant stations, the list of resignations will be greatly increased. List of the "gallant heroes" who destroyedthe Norfolk Yard. Com. H. Paulding, New York; Capt. C. Wilkes, of the late Exploring Expedition, New York, (volunteer.) Commanders.--W. Walker, D. C., volunteer; T. A. Jenkins, Va., volunteer; John Rodgers, Md., volunteer; B. F. Sands, Ky., ordered; J. Alden, Maine, volunteer. Lieutenants.--E. Parrott, N. H., ordered; Max Woodhule, N. Y., volunteer; Henry A. Wise, nephew of Gov. H. A. Wise, volunteer; Wm. Gibson, Md., volunteer; J. H. Russel, Md., volunteer; C. P. McGarey, N. C., ordered; A. W. Johnson, D. C., ordered; C. N. Morris, N. Y