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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: May 25, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 7 total hits in 6 results.
Lee Aroused (search for this): article 12
Gen. Lee Aroused.
--The correspondent of the Charleston Mercury, writing from this city, says:
In his congratulatory order Gen. Lee calls the victory "glorious"--a very strong term for him to use. I am satisfied that old man Bob's back was up as it never was before.
You see both his arms were gone — Jackson wounded and Longstreet away — and he was forced to the ungraceful process of kicking "Fighting Joe" out of his path.
This made him mad, really mad, for the first time since the war began; and so when he had settled Sedgwick, he rushed back through a terrible storm to finish with Hooker.
He was in for blood, and no mistake.
Hooker, delighted at the excuse of a freshet, had departed
Hooker (search for this): article 12
Jackson (search for this): article 12
Gen. Lee Aroused.
--The correspondent of the Charleston Mercury, writing from this city, says:
In his congratulatory order Gen. Lee calls the victory "glorious"--a very strong term for him to use. I am satisfied that old man Bob's back was up as it never was before.
You see both his arms were gone — Jackson wounded and Longstreet away — and he was forced to the ungraceful process of kicking "Fighting Joe" out of his path.
This made him mad, really mad, for the first time since the war began; and so when he had settled Sedgwick, he rushed back through a terrible storm to finish with Hooker.
He was in for blood, and no mistake.
Hooker, delighted at the excuse of a freshet, had departed
Lee (search for this): article 12
Gen. Lee Aroused.
--The correspondent of the Charleston Mercury, writing from this city, says:
In his congratulatory order Gen. Lee calls the victory "glorious"--a very strong term for him to use. I am satisfied that old man Bob's back was up as it never was before.
You see both his arms were gone — Jackson wounded and Longstreet away — and he was forced to the ungraceful process of kicking "Fighting Joe" out of his path.
This made him mad, really mad, for the first time since the war began; and so when he had settled Sedgwick, he rushed back through a terrible storm to finish with Hooker.
He was in for blood, and no mistake.
Hooker, delighted at the excuse of a freshet, had departed
Longstreet (search for this): article 12
Gen. Lee Aroused.
--The correspondent of the Charleston Mercury, writing from this city, says:
In his congratulatory order Gen. Lee calls the victory "glorious"--a very strong term for him to use. I am satisfied that old man Bob's back was up as it never was before.
You see both his arms were gone — Jackson wounded and Longstreet away — and he was forced to the ungraceful process of kicking "Fighting Joe" out of his path.
This made him mad, really mad, for the first time since the war began; and so when he had settled Sedgwick, he rushed back through a terrible storm to finish with Hooker.
He was in for blood, and no mistake.
Hooker, delighted at the excuse of a freshet, had departed
Sedgwick (search for this): article 12
Gen. Lee Aroused.
--The correspondent of the Charleston Mercury, writing from this city, says:
In his congratulatory order Gen. Lee calls the victory "glorious"--a very strong term for him to use. I am satisfied that old man Bob's back was up as it never was before.
You see both his arms were gone — Jackson wounded and Longstreet away — and he was forced to the ungraceful process of kicking "Fighting Joe" out of his path.
This made him mad, really mad, for the first time since the war began; and so when he had settled Sedgwick, he rushed back through a terrible storm to finish with Hooker.
He was in for blood, and no mistake.
Hooker, delighted at the excuse of a freshet, had departed