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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War. Volume 3.. Search the whole document.
Found 57 total hits in 16 results.
Chancellorsville (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 2.13
Marye's Heights (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 2.13
Georgia (Georgia, United States) (search for this): chapter 2.13
Notes of a Confederate staff-officer. by W. Roy Mason, Major, C. S. A.
Fredericksburg was the first great battle that I saw in its entire scope.
Here the situation of the country — a champaign tract inclosed in hills — offered the opportunity of seeing the troops on both sides, and the movements down the entire lines.
I witnessed the magnificent charges made on our left by Meagher's Irish Brigade, and was also a sorrowful witness of the death of our noble T. R. R. Cobb of Georgia, who fell mortally wounded at the foot of the stone-wall just at the door of Mrs. Martha Stevens.
This woman, the Molly Pitcher of the war, attended the wounded and the dying fearless of consequences, and refused to leave her house, although, standing just between the advancing line of the enemy and the stone-wall, the position was one of danger.
It is said that after using all the materials for bandages at her command, she tore from her person most of her garments, even on that bitter cold day, in h
Fredericksburg, Va. (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 2.13
Notes of a Confederate staff-officer. by W. Roy Mason, Major, C. S. A.
Fredericksburg was the first great battle that I saw in its entire scope.
Here the situat ery sick, I went out with a party of gentlemen friends who were visitors in Fredericksburg to inquire for her. Being told of our visit, she requested her son-in-law t and say to him that I thought he was too familiar with the surroundings of Fredericksburg to butt his brains out deliberately against our stone-walls.
Do you know rmy friends on the other side that he was not responsible for the attack on Fredericksburg in the manner in which it was made, as he was himself under orders, and was d with pain the burial of many thousands of Federal dead that had fallen at Fredericksburg.
The night before, the thermometer must have fallen to zero, and the bodie overnment sanction to disinter all the Federal dead on the battle-fields of Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, the Wilderness, and Spotsylvania Court House.
They were
Thomas F. Meagher (search for this): chapter 2.13
Notes of a Confederate staff-officer. by W. Roy Mason, Major, C. S. A.
Fredericksburg was the first great battle that I saw in its entire scope.
Here the situation of the country — a champaign tract inclosed in hills — offered the opportunity of seeing the troops on both sides, and the movements down the entire lines.
I witnessed the magnificent charges made on our left by Meagher's Irish Brigade, and was also a sorrowful witness of the death of our noble T. R. R. Cobb of Georgia, who fell mortally wounded at the foot of the stone-wall just at the door of Mrs. Martha Stevens.
This woman, the Molly Pitcher of the war, attended the wounded and the dying fearless of consequences, and refused to leave her house, although, standing just between the advancing line of the enemy and the stone-wall, the position was one of danger.
It is said that after using all the materials for bandages at her command, she tore from her person most of her garments, even on that bitter cold day, in h
Robert E. Lee (search for this): chapter 2.13
Thomas R. R. Cobb (search for this): chapter 2.13
Notes of a Confederate staff-officer. by W. Roy Mason, Major, C. S. A.
Fredericksburg was the first great battle that I saw in its entire scope.
Here the situation of the country — a champaign tract inclosed in hills — offered the opportunity of seeing the troops on both sides, and the movements down the entire lines.
I witnessed the magnificent charges made on our left by Meagher's Irish Brigade, and was also a sorrowful witness of the death of our noble T. R. R. Cobb of Georgia, who fell mortally wounded at the foot of the stone-wall just at the door of Mrs. Martha Stevens.
This woman, the Molly Pitcher of the war, attended the wounded and the dying fearless of consequences, and refused to leave her house, although, standing just between the advancing line of the enemy and the stone-wall, the position was one of danger.
It is said that after using all the materials for bandages at her command, she tore from her person most of her garments, even on that bitter cold day, in h
W. Roy Mason (search for this): chapter 2.13
Notes of a Confederate staff-officer. by W. Roy Mason, Major, C. S. A.
Fredericksburg was the first great battle that I saw in its entire scope.
Here the situation of the country — a champaign tract inclosed in hills — offered the opportunity of seeing the troops on both sides, and the movements down the entire lines.
I witnessed the magnificent charges made on our left by Meagher's Irish Brigade, and was also a sorrowful witness of the death of our noble T. R. R. Cobb of Georgia, who fel s who were visitors in Fredericksburg to inquire for her. Being told of our visit, she requested her son-in-law to ask me in. When jocularly asked by him if she was going to invite a gentleman into her sick-room, the old lady replied: Yes, ask Major Mason in,--we were old soldiers together.
After Burnside had withdrawn his forces across the Rappahannock, General Lee rode over to Marye's Heights, where I then was, and said to me: Captain, those people [meaning the enemy] have sent over a flag
William Barksdale (search for this): chapter 2.13
Ambrose E. Burnside (search for this): chapter 2.13