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Capt. Calvin D. Cowles , 23d U. S. Infantry, Major George B. Davis , U. S. Army, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, Table of Contents. (search)
Shenandoah Valley Campaign, August 7-November 28, 1864. Plate 100. Grant's Campaigns in 1864-65 in Virginia. Richmond, Va., Campaign, 1864-65. Plate 101. Atlanta, Ga., Campaign, May 1-September 8, 1864. Chickamauga, Ga., Campaign, August 16-September 22, 1863. Savannah, Ga., Campaign, November 15-December 21, 1864. Plate 102. Defenses of Munfordville, Camp Nelson, and Louisville, Ky. Plate 103. Defenses of Bowling Green, Covington, and Newport, Ky., and Cincinnati, Ohio. Plate 104. Plans of forts, batteries, etc., Petersburg, Va. Plate 105. Plans of forts, batteries, etc., Mobile, Ala. Field-works and lines, Petersburg, Va. Rappahannock Station, Va., March 29, 1862. Northern Alabama and Middle Tennessee Campaign, November 14, 1864-January 23, 1865. Campaign of the Carolinas, January 1-April 26, 1865. Plate 106. Drawings of canvas pontoon-boats, bridges, and chess wagons, March 3, 1865. Rifled projectiles used in Virgini
Capt. Calvin D. Cowles , 23d U. S. Infantry, Major George B. Davis , U. S. Army, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, Maps, sketches, etc., Pertaining to the several volumes. (search)
and Pine Mountains, Ga. 47 Lovejoy's Station, Ga. 40, 61 Marietta, Ga. 43, 49, 96 New Hope Church, Ga. 58, 90 Noonday Creek, Ga. 49 Owen's Mill, Ga. 61 Peach Tree Creek, Ga. 101 Powder Springs, Ga. 62 Resaca, Ga. 58, 61 Roswell, Ga. 49, 62, 63 Ruff's Mill, Ga. 61 Sandtown, Ga. 45, 90 Snake Creek Gap, Ga. 63 Volume XXXIX. Bowling Green, Ky. 103 Brice's Cross-Roads to Stubbs' Plantation, Miss. 63 Camp Nelson, Ky. 102 Cincinnati, Ohio 103 Covington, Ky. 103 Fort Morgan, Ala. 63 Grant's proposed lines of operations 135-A Harrisburg, Miss. 63 Mobile Bay, Ala. 63 Munfordville, Ky. 102 Newport, Ky. 103 Turkeytown Valley, Ala. 46 Volume XL. Battery Sawyer, Va. 125 Battery Spofford, Va. 124 Bermuda Hundred, Va. 65, 77 Crow's Nest, near Bermuda Hundred, Va. 67 Deep Bottom, Va. 65 Five Forks, Va. 77 Fort Prescott, Va. 107 Fort Wisconsin, Va. 124
Capt. Calvin D. Cowles , 23d U. S. Infantry, Major George B. Davis , U. S. Army, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, Authorities. (search)
1863 48, 1 Arms, G. H.: Belmont, Mo., Jan. 2, 1862 4, 2 Aschbach, G. A.: Cincinnati, Ohio, Covington and Newport, Ky. 103, 2 Asmussen, Charles W.: Atlanta to Savannah, Ga.,rch 2, 1865 72, 3, 7 Winchester, Va., Sept. 19, 1864 99, 1 Gilliss, John R.: Cincinnati, Ohio, Covington and Newport, Ky. 103, 2 Gillmore, Quincy A.: Cape Fear River, N. C., 18 and vicinity 115, 5 Johnsonville, Tenn., and vicinity 115, 1 Ransom, O. P.: Cincinnati, Ohio, Covington and Newport, Ky. 103, 2 Ransom, Thomas E. G.: Atlanta, Ga., July 23-Aug, 2 Schumann, E.: Richmond, Va., and vicinity, 1864-65 77, 1 Searles, W. H.: Cincinnati, Ohio, Covington and Newport, Ky. 103, 2 Serrell, Edward W.: Morris Island, S. C., July 23, 1 Simpson, James H.: Bowling Green, Ky. 103, 1 Camp Nelson, Ky. 102, 2 Cincinnati, Ohio, Covington and Newport, Ky. 103, 2 Louisville, Ky. 102, 3 Munfordville, Ky., 1863
Capt. Calvin D. Cowles , 23d U. S. Infantry, Major George B. Davis , U. S. Army, Leslie J. Perry, Joseph W. Kirkley, The Official Military Atlas of the Civil War, Index. (search)
. 93, 1 Chulahoma, Miss. 154, C11 Chula Station, Va. 16, 1; 74, 1; 78, 1; 93, 1; 100, 1; 137, F6 Chunkey Creek, Miss. 51, 1; 155, C13 Fort Churchill, Nev. Ter. 120, 1; 134, 1 Cincinnati (U. S.S.) 27, 2 Cincinnati, Ohio 118, 1; 135-A; 141, A1; 151, C12; 171 Defenses 103, 2 Circleville, Va. 7, 1 Citronelle, Ala. 135-A; 147, C3 City Point, Va. 16, 1; 17, 1; 19, 1; 20, 1; 22, 1; 56, 1; 65, 1; 74, 1; 76, 5; 77, 3; 92, 1; 93, 1; 100, 1 Union hospitals 94, 5-94, 7 Wilderness, May 5-7, 1864 55, 1; 83, 1, 83, 2; 96, 1 Pile Bridge, near Varin 76, 6 Pontoon bridges 68, 6; 125, 11 South side, Oct., 1864 93, 1 James River Road, Va. 92, 1 Jamestown, Ky. 9, 2; 103, 2; 118, 1; 135-A; 141, A1; 150, D10, 150, E8 Jarratt's Station, Va. 74, 1 Jasper, Tenn. 24, 3; 35, 5; 97, 1; 118, 1; 135-A; 149, C9; 171 Vicinity, July 24, 1863 35, 5 Jeanerette, La. 23, 8; 135-A Fort J
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 14. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), President Davis in reply to General Sherman. (search)
whole people. Yet the Senators that called for this historical statement will hardly hold that President Lincoln was seeking a dictatorship because he enforced the draft. This historical statement might have been enlarged and extended by the Senate, and made to embrace the deliberate misrepresentation by General Sherman of the communication to him by Colonel J. D Stevenson, in regard to Albert Sidney Johnston's command in San Francisco. In a letter to Colonel William H. Knight, of Cincinnati, Ohio, dated October 28, 1884, General Sherman asserted that Colonel J. D. Stevenson, now living in San Francisco, has often told me that he had cautioned the Government as to a plot or conspiracy, through the department commander, Albert Sidney Johnston, to deliver possession of the forts, etc., to men in California sympathizing with the rebels in the South, and he thinks it was by his advice that the President (Lincoln) sent General E. V. Sumner to relieve Johnston of his command before th
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 20. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Unveiling of the monument to the Richmond Howitzers (search)
extent the will was, in effect, sustained, and Judge Leigh was appointed commissioner to transport and settle the negroes as provided therein. The State selected for the settlement was Ohio; but when the commissioner landed, his first interview was with a mob formed to resist and repel the negro settlement. The clearest glimpse of the State of feeling is derived from the newspapers of the time. Newspapers on the situation. [from the National Intelligencer, July 15, 1846.] The Cincinnati (Ohio) Chronicle of the 9th instant says that the emancipated slaves of John Randolph, who recently passed up the Miami Canal to their settlement in Mercer county, Ohio, met with a warm reception at Bremen. The citizens of Mercer county turned out en masse and called a meeting, or rather formed themselves into one immediately, and passed resolutions to the effect that said slaves should leave in twenty-four hours, which they did, in other boats than the ones which conveyed them there. They
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 23. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.9 (search)
ing! Quick, my falchion! Let me front them ere I die. Ah! no more amid the battle Shall my heart exulting swell; Isis and Orsiris guard thee— Cleopatra—Rome—farewell. —W. H. Lytle. General W. H. Lytle. William H. Lytle was born in Cincinnati, O., November 2, 1826. His great-grandfather, William, fought in the French war. His grandfather, of the same name, was an early pioneer in Ohio, and active in Indian warfare. His father, Robert T. Lytle, was a member of Congress, 1833-35, and ems of merit. His best-known poem is the one we copy above, written in 1857. No book collection of his verses has ever been made. On the death of this brilliant poet-soldier, General W. S. Rosecrans issued the following: headquarters, Cincinnati, O., January 8, 1864. As Brigadier-General Wm. H. Lytle fell leading a gallant charge against the foe advancing on our retreating troops, I may be excused from departing from the strict rule of mentioning those officers whose good conduct cou
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 35. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), chapter 1.59 (search)
e privateer Jeff Davis. Francis M. Rody, Bakerfield, Cal.—Lieutenant C. S. N.; served naval battery Fort Hindman, Johnson Island expedition, steamer Raleigh, steamer Albemarle in fight at Plymouth, and in the sound, cruiser Chickamauga. Dabney M. Scales, Memphis, Tenn.—Midshipman U. S. N., lieutenant C. S. N.; served on Savannah Station, ram Arkansas, and in battle with U. S. fleets; in battery at Port Hudson, on steamer Atlanta, aboard steamer Shenandoah. Clarence L. Stanton, Cincinnati, Ohio—Lieutenant C. S. N.; served at Charleston, on cruiser Chickamauga, at Fort Fisher; captured at battle of Sailor's Creek. Benj. R. Sheriff, Baltimore, Md.—Seaman; served on steamer Virginia in battle of Hampton Roads, afterwards at Charleston. Julien M. Spencer—Midshipman U. S. N., lieutenant C. S. N.; served at Drewry's Bluff, steamer Baltic, Mobile Station. Savage Smith, Richmond, Va.—Captain's clerk to Lieutenant John H. Parker; served at Richmond. A. L. Smith, Charlo
Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio a city of 250,000 pop., on Ohio river. The metropolis of Ohio, and the great center of the pork trade. Connected to all points by railroads and steamboats. It has an extensive trade with all parts of the South and West. The largest city in the state.
ological summary and record of historical events I., 346. Chronology: battles and action, I., 346-368; II., 320-352; III., 318-346; VI., 308-322. Chrysler, M. H., X., 223. Church, W. C., II., 142; X., 7, 25, 26, 32. Church, oldest in America, II., 351; built by engineers, VIII., 257. Churchill, T., X., 257. Churchill, T. J., II., 330. Churchill's Battery, Confederate, I., 352. Cilley, J. P., X., 209. Cimarron,, U. S. S., VI., 316. Cincinnati, Ohio, II., 64; army repair shops at, VIII., 40, 82. Cincinnati, horse of U. S. Grant, IV., 291-298; X., 301. Cincinnati,, U. S. S.: I., 182 seq., 185, 215, 222, 237, 238, 356, 362; II. 187, 222; VI., 35, 83, 85, 149, 214, 216, 220, 221, 314, 318; IX., 271. Cipher messages Viii., 350. Cist, H. M., X., 237. Citico Creek, Tenn., II., 295. Citadel, at Port Hudson, II., 215; a Quaker gun, II., 215. City of Memphis, U. S. hospital boat, VII., 318, 319.
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