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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Varina Davis, Jefferson Davis: Ex-President of the Confederate States of America, A Memoir by his Wife, Volume 2. Search the whole document.
Found 81 total hits in 26 results.
Roanoke Island (North Carolina, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county of
Fort Pillow (Tennessee, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county o
Louisiana (Louisiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Mississippi (Mississippi, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
France (France) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county of
Island Number Ten (Missouri, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county of
Fredericksburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Norfolk (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county o
Donelson (Indiana, United States) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county of
England (United Kingdom) (search for this): chapter 36
Chapter 36: introduction to 1863.
The year 1863 opened drearily for the President, but the Confederates generally seemed to have, for some unexplained cause, renewed hope of recognition by England and France, and with this they felt sure of a successful termination of the struggle.
Mr. Davis was oppressed by the fall of Donelson, Nashville, Corinth, Roanoke Island, New Orleans, Yorktown, Norfolk, Fort Pillow, Island No.10, Memphis, General Bragg's defeat at Murfreesboro, the burning of the Virginia and the ram Mississippi, the sinking of the Arkansas, and other minor disasters.
The victory at Fredericksburg was the one bright spot in all this dark picture.
Complaints from the people of the subjugated States came in daily.
Women were set adrift across our borders with their children, penniless and separated from all they held dear.
Their property was confiscated, the newspapers were suppressed, and the presses sold under the Confiscation act.
In Tennessee, county o