Browsing named entities in The Photographic History of The Civil War: in ten volumes, Thousands of Scenes Photographed 1861-65, with Text by many Special Authorities, Volume 7: Prisons and Hospitals. (ed. Francis Trevelyan Miller). You can also browse the collection for Brown or search for Brown in all documents.

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The act was renewed on the 13th of October, 1862, and the period was extended until the 12th of February, 1863. The writ was not again suspended until February, 1864, when the Confederate Congress did so in the case of prisoners whose arrest was authorized by the President or the Secretary of War. This act expired on the 2d of August, 1864, and was never reenacted, though President Davis recommended its continuance. No complete lists of arbitrary arrests in the Confederacy are in existence, and we are able only to find a name here and there in the records. From the excitement caused by the arrests under the act for the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, it would appear that they were comparatively few. Some of the governors, as Governor Vance, of North Carolina, and Governor Brown, of Georgia, were much aroused over the arrest and detention of some of their citizens, and, in heated correspondence with the War Department, claimed that the rights of the States were in peril.
other books that have endeared her to millions of readers. Her diary of 1862 contains this characteristic note: November. Thirty years old. Decided to go to Washington as a nurse if I could find a place. Help needed, and I love nursing and must let out my pent — up energy in some new way. She had not yet attained fame as a writer, but it was during this time that she wrote for a newspaper the letters afterwards collected as Hospital Sketches. It is due to the courtesy of Messrs. Little, Brown & Company of Boston that the wartime portrait is here reproduced. An afternoon concert at the officers' quarters, Harewood hospital, near Washington Louisa M. Alcott, the author of little women, as a nurse in 1862 Nashville, and there Doctor Stout himself, before his promotion, was placed in charge of the Gordon Hospital, formerly an old warehouse. This hospital had been in charge of a committee of ladies who had employed civilian physicians to attend the sick, and the hospital a
other books that have endeared her to millions of readers. Her diary of 1862 contains this characteristic note: November. Thirty years old. Decided to go to Washington as a nurse if I could find a place. Help needed, and I love nursing and must let out my pent — up energy in some new way. She had not yet attained fame as a writer, but it was during this time that she wrote for a newspaper the letters afterwards collected as Hospital Sketches. It is due to the courtesy of Messrs. Little, Brown & Company of Boston that the wartime portrait is here reproduced. An afternoon concert at the officers' quarters, Harewood hospital, near Washington Louisa M. Alcott, the author of little women, as a nurse in 1862 Nashville, and there Doctor Stout himself, before his promotion, was placed in charge of the Gordon Hospital, formerly an old warehouse. This hospital had been in charge of a committee of ladies who had employed civilian physicians to attend the sick, and the hospital a