hide Sorting

You can sort these results in two ways:

By entity
Chronological order for dates, alphabetical order for places and people.
By position (current method)
As the entities appear in the document.

You are currently sorting in ascending order. Sort in descending order.

hide Most Frequent Entities

The entities that appear most frequently in this document are shown below.

Entity Max. Freq Min. Freq
Charleston (South Carolina, United States) 893 3 Browse Search
United States (United States) 752 0 Browse Search
Washington (United States) 742 0 Browse Search
South Carolina (South Carolina, United States) 656 0 Browse Search
Baltimore, Md. (Maryland, United States) 411 1 Browse Search
Robert Anderson 367 7 Browse Search
Jefferson Davis 330 2 Browse Search
Maryland (Maryland, United States) 330 0 Browse Search
Abraham Lincoln 268 0 Browse Search
Benjamin F. Butler 235 3 Browse Search
View all entities in this document...

Browsing named entities in a specific section of Benson J. Lossing, Pictorial Field Book of the Civil War. Volume 1.. Search the whole document.

Found 1,562 total hits in 439 results.

... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 ...
Thomas Chiles Perrin (search for this): chapter 4
eople about to be consummated. The whole assembly at once rose to its feet, and, with hats off, listened to the touching and eloquent appeal to the All-wise Disposer of events. At the conclusion of the ceremonies, when the signatures had all been affixed by the members, whose names were called in the order of their districts, The signatures were written in five columns, and in the following order:-- D. F. Jamison, Delegate from Barnwell, and President of the Convention. Thomas Chiles Perrin.R. G. M. Dunovant.A. W. Bethen.John M. Shingler.B. H. Rutledge. Edward Noble.James Parsons Carroll.E. W. Goodwin.Daniel Du Pre.Edward McCrady. J. H. Wilson.William Gregg.William D. Johnson.A. Mazyck.Francis I. Porcher. Thos. Thomson.Andrew J. Hammond.Alex. McLeod.William Cain.T. L. Gourdin. David Lewis Wardlaw.James Tompkins.John P. Kinard.P. G. Snowden.John S. Palmer. John Alfred Calhoun.James C. Smyly.Robert Moorman.George W. Seabrook.John L. Nowell. John Izard Middleton.John
J. P. Reed (search for this): chapter 4
Wardlaw.James Tompkins.John P. Kinard.P. G. Snowden.John S. Palmer. John Alfred Calhoun.James C. Smyly.Robert Moorman.George W. Seabrook.John L. Nowell. John Izard Middleton.John Hugh Means.Joseph Caldwell.John Jenkins.John S. O'Hear. Benjamin E. Sessions.William Strother Lyles.Simon Fair.R. G. Davant.John G. Landrum. J. N. Whitner.Henry Campbell Davis.Thomas Worth Glover.E. M. Seabrook.B. B. Foster. James L. Orr.John Buchanan.Lawrence M. Keitt.John J. Wannamaker.Benjamin F. Kilgore. J. P. Reed.James C. Furman.Donald Rowe Barton.Elias B. Scott.James H. Carlisle. R. S. Simpson.P. E. Duncan.William Hunter.Jos. E. Jenkins.Simpson Bobo. Benjamin Franklin Mauldin.W. K. Easley.Andrew F. Luis.Langdon Cheves.William Curtis. Lewis Malone Ayer, Jr.James Harrison.Robert A. Thompson.Georde Rhodes.H. D. Green. W. Peronneau Finley.W. H. Campbell.William S. Grisham.A. G. Magrath.Mathew P. Mayes. I. I. Brabham.T. J. Withers.John Maxwell.Wm. Porcher Miles.Thomas Reese English, St. Benjamin
Langdon Cheves (search for this): chapter 4
mittee was composed of Robert Barnwell Rhett, John Alfred Calhoun, W. P. Finley, Isaac D. I Wilson, W. F De Saussure, Langdon Cheves, and Merrick E. Carn. another to draft a declaration of the causes that impelled and justified the secession of Southpson.P. E. Duncan.William Hunter.Jos. E. Jenkins.Simpson Bobo. Benjamin Franklin Mauldin.W. K. Easley.Andrew F. Luis.Langdon Cheves.William Curtis. Lewis Malone Ayer, Jr.James Harrison.Robert A. Thompson.Georde Rhodes.H. D. Green. W. Peronneau Fin-All the revenue and postal laws, repeated Mr. Gregg, fell to the ground on the passage of the Ordinance of Secession. Mr. Cheves declared, to avoid inconvenience to the people, temporary arrangements must be adopted for carrying on the Government. al affairs, and that things must for the present remain in status quo, or confusion will arise. Mr. Mazyck agreed with Cheves and others,: that the duties of collectors and postmasters in South Carolina were extinguished. He was favorable to an a
Lansing Stout (search for this): chapter 4
y; J. S. Morrill, of Vermont; T. A. R. Nelson, of Tennessee; Wm. McKee Dunn, of Indiana; Miles Taylor, of Louisiana; Reuben Davis, of Mississippi; William Kellogg, of Illinois; George S. Houston, of Alabama; F. H. Morse, of Maine; John S. Phelps, of Missouri; Albert Rust, of Arkansas; William A. Howard, of Michigan; George S. Hawkins, of Florida; A. J. Hamilton, of Texas; C. C. Washburn, of Wisconsin; S. R. Curtis, of Iowa; John C. Burch, of California; William Winslow, of Minnesota; and Lansing Stout, of Oregon. The Speaker, in framing this Committee, chose conservative men of the Free-labor States. Those holding extreme anti-slavery views were excluded. Mr. Pennington shared in the feeling throughout the Free-labor States, .that conciliation was desirable; and that every concession, consistent with right, should be made to the malcontents. and it became the recipient, by reference, of a large number of resolutions, suggestions, and propositions offered in the House for the amendm
Thomas Reese English (search for this): chapter 4
enjamin F. Kilgore. J. P. Reed.James C. Furman.Donald Rowe Barton.Elias B. Scott.James H. Carlisle. R. S. Simpson.P. E. Duncan.William Hunter.Jos. E. Jenkins.Simpson Bobo. Benjamin Franklin Mauldin.W. K. Easley.Andrew F. Luis.Langdon Cheves.William Curtis. Lewis Malone Ayer, Jr.James Harrison.Robert A. Thompson.Georde Rhodes.H. D. Green. W. Peronneau Finley.W. H. Campbell.William S. Grisham.A. G. Magrath.Mathew P. Mayes. I. I. Brabham.T. J. Withers.John Maxwell.Wm. Porcher Miles.Thomas Reese English, St. Benjamin W. Lawton.James Chesnut, Jr.John E. Frampton.John Townsend.Albertus Chambers Spain. John McKee.Joseph Brevard Kershaw.W. Ferguson Hutson.Robert N. Gourdin.J. M. Gadberry. Thomas W. Noon.Thomas W. Beaty.W. F. De Saussure.H. W. Conner.J. S. Sims. Richard Woods.William I. Ellis.William Hopkins.Theodore D. Wagner.Wm. H. Gist. A Q. Dunovant.R. L. Crawford.James H. Adams.R. Barnwell Rhett.James Jefferies. John A. Inglis.W. C. Caruthers.Maxcy Gregg.C. G. Memminger.Anthony
John Julius Pringle Smith (search for this): chapter 4
uson Hutson.Robert N. Gourdin.J. M. Gadberry. Thomas W. Noon.Thomas W. Beaty.W. F. De Saussure.H. W. Conner.J. S. Sims. Richard Woods.William I. Ellis.William Hopkins.Theodore D. Wagner.Wm. H. Gist. A Q. Dunovant.R. L. Crawford.James H. Adams.R. Barnwell Rhett.James Jefferies. John A. Inglis.W. C. Caruthers.Maxcy Gregg.C. G. Memminger.Anthony W. Dozier. Henry McIver.D. P. Robinson.John H. Kinsler.Gabriel Manigault.John G. Pressley. Stephen Jackson.H. E. Young.Ephraim M. Clark.John Julius Pringle Smith.R. C. Logan. W. Pinckney Shingler.H. W. Garlington.Alex. H. Brown.Isaac W. Hayne.Francis S. Parker. Peter P. Bonneau.John D. Williams.E. S. P. Bellinger.Jn. H. Honour.Benj. Faneuil Duncan. John P. Richardson.W. D. Watts.Merrick E. Carn.Richard De Treville.Samuel Taylor Atkinson. John L. Manning.Thos. Wier.E. R. Henderson.Thomas M. Hanckel.Alex. M. Forster. John I. Ingram.H. I. Caughman.Peter Stokes.A. W. Burnet.Wm. Blackburn Wilson. Edgar W. Charles.John C. Geiger.Daniel Flu
William W. Boyce (search for this): chapter 4
ty-three was made by the Speaker, The Committee consisted of the following persons:--Thomas Corwin, of Ohio; John S. Millson, of Virginia; Charles Francis Adams, of Massachusetts; W. Winslow, of North Carolina; James Humphreys, of New York; Wm. W. Boyce, of South Carolina; James H. Campbell, of Pennsylvania; Peter E. Love, of Georgia; Orris S. Ferry, of Connecticut; Henry Winter Davis, of Maryland; C. Robinson, of Rhode Island; W. G. Whiteley, of Delaware; M. W. Tappen, of New Hampshire; John the South Carolina delegation in Congress, The written communications to the President were signed by the following named persons, then Representatives in Congress from South Carolina:--John McQueen, William Porcher Miles, M. L. Bonham, W. W, Boyce, and Lawrence M. Keitt. that the relative military condition should remain the same, while each party forbore hostile movements. This statement of Miles satisfied the Convention that they might play treason to their hearts' content until the 4th
Edward McCrady (search for this): chapter 4
he All-wise Disposer of events. At the conclusion of the ceremonies, when the signatures had all been affixed by the members, whose names were called in the order of their districts, The signatures were written in five columns, and in the following order:-- D. F. Jamison, Delegate from Barnwell, and President of the Convention. Thomas Chiles Perrin.R. G. M. Dunovant.A. W. Bethen.John M. Shingler.B. H. Rutledge. Edward Noble.James Parsons Carroll.E. W. Goodwin.Daniel Du Pre.Edward McCrady. J. H. Wilson.William Gregg.William D. Johnson.A. Mazyck.Francis I. Porcher. Thos. Thomson.Andrew J. Hammond.Alex. McLeod.William Cain.T. L. Gourdin. David Lewis Wardlaw.James Tompkins.John P. Kinard.P. G. Snowden.John S. Palmer. John Alfred Calhoun.James C. Smyly.Robert Moorman.George W. Seabrook.John L. Nowell. John Izard Middleton.John Hugh Means.Joseph Caldwell.John Jenkins.John S. O'Hear. Benjamin E. Sessions.William Strother Lyles.Simon Fair.R. G. Davant.John G. Landrum. J.
vals of reason, formerly supposed to be influenced by the changes of the Moon. It is related of the late Judge Pettigru, of Charleston, who resisted the madness of the secessionists while he lived, that on being asked by a stranger in the streets of his city the right direction to the Lunatic Asylum, he pointed to the east, the west, the north, and the south, and said, It is there, and there, and there, and there — the whole State is a lunatic asylum. Banner of South Carolina. On the 26th, the Convention agreed to send a commissioner to each Slave-labor State that might hold a convention, to bear to them a copy of the South Carolina Ordinance of Secession; When this question was before the Convention, a member (Mr. Dargan) proposed to send a copy of the ordinance, with the Declaration of causes, &c., to all the States of the Union; and, when it was objected to, he said that a statement of reasons is required, as well as the ordinance. Courtesy to our late Confederates, he
South Carolina, and ordering all duties to be paid into the State treasury. On the following day, the Governor was authorized to receive embassadors, ministers, consuls, &c., from foreign countries, and to appoint the same officers to represent South Carolina abroad. It was also decreed, that all citizens of the United States who were living within the limits of South Carolina at the time of the passage of the Ordinance of Secession should be considered citizens of the new nation. On the 29th, the Convention, which assumed supreme dignity in the State, transferred to the Legislature the powers lately vested in Congress, excepting during the session of the Convention. The judicial powers of the United States were vested in the State Courts; and Governor Pickens, who had organized his cabinet, assumed the exalted position of the Chief Magistrate of an independent nation. His constitutional advisers consisted of A. G. Magrath, Secretary of State; D. F. Jamison, Secretary of War; C.
... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 ...