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Browsing named entities in Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 37. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones).
Found 8,210 total hits in 2,268 results.
August (search for this): chapter 1.1
1865 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
Work of the Ordnance Bureau of the war Department of the Confederate States, 1861-5. By J. W. Mallet, ex-Lieut. Col. of Artillery and Superintendent of Confederate States Ordnance Laboratories.
President Jefferson Davis bluntly stated the truth when he wrote that it soon became evident to all that the South had gone to war without counting the cost.
Our chief difficulty was the want of arms and munitions of war.
In the interval between the election and the inauguration of President Linco he United States Army, is conspicuously reproducing his father's organizing power as the Chief Sanitary Officer of the Panama Canal Works.
There remains to mention but one other phase of the work of ordnance officers in the troublous times of 1861-65—namely, the organizing and drilling of forces for local defense against the enemy, made up of the white workmen and other employees at several of the arsenals.
There was quite a respectable force of this kind at Richmond; Augusta had a good strong
1862 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
1861 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
Work of the Ordnance Bureau of the war Department of the Confederate States, 1861-5. By J. W. Mallet, ex-Lieut. Col. of Artillery and Superintendent of Confederate States Ordnance Laboratories.
P at of the Confederate government having been moved to Richmond, Col. Gorgas was, in the spring of 1861, busily engaged in organizing his work and arranging for the ordnance demands of the large forces chmond, under the able management of Gen. Jos. R. Anderson, were of overshadowing importance.
In 1861, the Southern States were almost wholly occupied with agricultural pursuits, and their resources d chief, General Rodes, killed in the following September at Winchester.
During the Civil War of 1861, the armament and warlike munitions of the world were very different from and much simpler than t remains to mention but one other phase of the work of ordnance officers in the troublous times of 1861-65—namely, the organizing and drilling of forces for local defense against the enemy, made up of
November (search for this): chapter 1.1
September (search for this): chapter 1.1
Jefferson Davis (search for this): chapter 1.1
Work of the Ordnance Bureau of the war Department of the Confederate States, 1861-5. By J. W. Mallet, ex-Lieut. Col. of Artillery and Superintendent of Confederate States Ordnance Laboratories.
President Jefferson Davis bluntly stated the truth when he wrote that it soon became evident to all that the South had gone to war without counting the cost.
Our chief difficulty was the want of arms and munitions of war.
In the interval between the election and the inauguration of President Linco in special charge at Richmond of this branch of the service, agencies were established at Bermuda, Nassau and Havana to manage it, and gradually the purchase was made of a number of steamers specially suited to blockade running, the R. E. Lee, Lady Davis, Eugenia, Stag, etc., which brought, chiefly to Wilmington and Charleston, stores for which there was the most urgent need, and took out cargoes of cotton in payment, which were almost as eagerly desired in Europe.
Most of the mercury used in
February, 1861 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
1864 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1
1812 AD (search for this): chapter 1.1