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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 3. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.). Search the whole document.

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July 1st, 1863 AD (search for this): chapter 4
the second, all married persons between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five. All men thus included in the new census were liable to be drafted from the 1st of July, 1863, to the 1st of July, 1865, and to continue in the service during three years, while the mere fact of having been included in the new census placed them under226,762, and certificates of indebtedness to $157,479,261. The aggregate of these receipts, together with the funds remaining in the Treasury vaults on the 1st of July, 1863, amounted to $901,125,674.86. The expenditures were $895,796,630.65; thus leaving, with all accounts settled, a balance in the Treasury of $5,329,044.21; butt should have done before: the largest portion of the Fourth army corps was incorporated with the Army of the Potomac. Chapter 3: Oak Hill. ON the 1st of July, 1863, the whole Southern army, as we have seen, was on the march since morning to concentrate itself at Gettysburg. Ewell, who had at first proceeded in the dire
March 19th (search for this): chapter 4
il, which, through a fatal shortsighted policy, was still worked so as to be made to yield products which were thenceforth useless. The armies were at times short of provisions. The most important places, like Vicksburg, were insufficiently supplied with food. Finally, disturbances among women who were clamoring for bread—disturbances which were directed, as always happens everywhere under similar circumstances, against monopolists—broke out first at Salisbury in North Carolina on the 19th of March and at Raleigh on the 26th; then even at Richmond on the 2d of April, and on the 15th at Mobile. In order to ward off the evil, at least for the future, the government conceived the idea of prohibiting the cultivation of the soil except for cereals. It was guided, however, by its advisers. On the 10th of April, Mr. Davis through an official proclamation appealed to the patriotism of all planters, conjuring them to devote themselves exclusively to the production of articles of food: t
... 54 55 56 57 58 59