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George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army (ed. George Gordon Meade), chapter 6 (search)
igned Historicus, which you have doubtless read, and which is filled with false and perverted statements, which have astonished even myself, and those around me, who have great respect for the capacity, adroitness and skill in this respect of my opponents. For article mentioned, see Appendix J. Give my love to Kate, Wife of Mr. Cram. and tell her I shall come out of this last battle of Gettysburg with flying colors. To Mrs. George G. Meade: Headquarters army of the Potomac, March 16, 1864. My Gettysburg fight is at present in statu quo, except that I have enclosed to the War Department the letter from the New York Herald, of the 12th, signed Historicus, saying I believed it was written, or dictated, by General Sickles, and that I desire he may be called on to state whether he authorized it, or endorses it; and should he reply in the affirmative, I then ask for a court of inquiry. If the department is not disposed to accede to this, I then ask permission to make publi
George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Major-General United States Army (ed. George Gordon Meade), chapter 19 (search)
Appendix L: newspaper article, a reply by General Barnes to a newspaper article signed Historicus, mentioned in letter of March 22, 1864. see page 182, Vol. II (for article signed Historicus, see Appendix J) (New York Herald, March 21, 1864) The battle of Gettysburg To the editor of the Herald: Washington, March 16, 1864. In the New York Herald of the 12th inst., a communication over the signature of Historicus purports to give the account of an EyeWit-ness of the battle of Gettysburg, and the reason for it assigned that up to this time no clear narrative of it has appeared. I desire to call attention to that portion of it which pretends to relate certain events in connection with the part taken by the Fifth Corps in that engagement, and particularly to what the writer refers to as an alarming incident occurring in the First division of that corps, which I had the honor to command. He says:— An alarming incident, however, occurred. Barnes' division of the Fift