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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, Authorities. (search)
burg, Va., Dec. 11-15, 1862 30, 3, 4 Brooks, A. F.: Sherman's operations in Georgia, May 5-Sept. 4, 1864 88, 2 Brooks, Thomas B.: Bermuda Hundred, Va., June, 1864 65, 1 Morris Island, S. C., July 10-Sept. 7, 1863 38, 2; 44, 1, 2, 4 Brown, G.: Richmond, Va., and vicinity, 1864-65 77, 1 Brown, Harvey: Pickens Fort, Fla., May 27, 1861 5, 6 Brown, S. Howell Gettysburg, Pa., July 1-3, 1863 43, 1 Maryland Campaign, Sept. 3-20, 1862 29, 1 Browne, O. L.F.: Goldsborough, N. C., to Washington, D. C 86, 8-16 Buckner, Simon B.: Chickamauga, Ga., Sept. 19-20, 1863 111, 9 Buell, Don Carlos: Army of the Cumberland, campaigns 24, 3 Corinth, Miss., April 29-June 10, 1862 14, 3 Pittsburg Landing, Tenn., April 6-7, 1862 13, 1 Shiloh, Tenn., April 6-7, 1861 13, 1 Somerset, Ky., vicinity, 1861 9, 2 Bull, Asst. Surg. (C): Spanish Fort, Ala., March 27-April 8, 1865 90, 11 Burchard, W.:
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 14. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), President Davis in reply to General Sherman. (search)
ictions of what was best to be done at the time. In the same volume, on page 657, Mr. Stephens speaks of me as a man of very strong convictions and great earnestness of purpose. In a conversation had during the summer of 1863, which was reduced to writing at the time, Mr. Stephens said: The hardships growing out of our military arrangements are not the fault of the President; * * * they are due to his subordinates. In October of the same year, (Life of A. H. Stephens, by Johnson & Browne, pages 445-47,) he wrote to a friend who had asked what would be his probable course in the event of the death of myself, as follows: I should regard the death of the President as the greatest possible public calamity. What I should do I know not.: A large number of prominent and active men in the country * * would distrust my ability to conduct affairs successfully. They have now, and would have, no confidence in my judgment or capacity for the position that such an untimely misfortune
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 17. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), The siege and evacuation of Savannah, Georgia, in December, 1864. (search)
the Telfair swamp to a point near Lawton's house, and Brigadier-General John K. Jackson, commanding his left from the vicinity of Lawton's barn to the Atlantic and Gulf railroad crossing over the Little Ogeechee river. This front of Major-General Wright was irregular, being interrupted by dense woods and impracticable swamps. It was held by about 2,700 men, twelve hundred under Brigadier-General Mercer and the rest under Brigadier- General Jackson. General Mercer's command consisted of Colonel Browne's local brigade (composed of Major Jackson's Augusta battalion, Major Adams' Athens battalion and a regiment of local troops under Colonel Nisbet), Brooks' foreign battalion, a detachment of the 55th Georgia regiment and Captain Barnes' company of artillerists from Augusta This force was disposed as follows: Lieutenant-Colonel R. B. Nisbet occupied the line from Battery Richardson to Battery Barnwell. Griffin's detachment of the 55th Georgia regiment supported Batteries Wheeler and Simp
Republican Congressional Losses. --The elections this week have deducted four from the Republican representation in Congress from New England, as compared with the last Congress, and added four to the Conservative side. The men superseded (who were all candidates for re-election,) are John Woodruff and O. S. Ferry, of Conn., and Christopher Robinson and Wm. D. Brayton, of R. I. They are superseded by English and Geo. C. Woodruff, Democrats, of Connecticut, and Sheffield and Browne, Conservatives, of Rhode Island. A Conservative gain of four out of six members elected.
riting the oral evidence offered in support of the alleged ownership, and loss or injury; and the evidence thus reduced to writing, together with the affidavits taken by him, shall be transmitted by him to the Secretary of State within thirty deeps from the day of hearing. 4. The judicial officer shall state in his certificate whether the evidence so heard and transmitted, is, or is not, entitled to credit 5. Evidence shall also be taken or affidavit made and transmitted with the other evidence, showing the State or county of which the owner alleging loss or injury was a citizen at the time of such loss or injury, and at the time of offering evidence or making affidavits. 6. In case the Department should be required to furnish certified copies of the papers field, the charge for furnishing the same, as established by law, will be ten cents for every hundred words of copy Wm. M. Browne. Acting Secretary of State. Department of State, Richmond, Oct. 25, 1861 oc 28--6t
e of the soldiers, and forwarded to Gen. Lockwood. We learn that the letters found in it implicate citizens in this vicinity and further North; but no particulars have yet transpired in regard to it. We did learn that there was one letter from Dr. Browne (alluded to in another place) to his wife, who still remains in this vicinity, directing her to forward him certain box of papers which he desired. The house in which the lady and box were was visited by the General's order, and the box of pappars, and sails painted black, so that at night is perfectly invisible." "Headquarters.--General Lockwood has his headquarters at Drummondtown, which is about one mile from camp. He occupies the fine brick mansion left vacant by a certain Dr. Browne. The Doctor was a leading man here, and lived in some style. The dwelling is a large and commodious one, and the grounds laid out with taste. General Lockwood has his family with him, and is quite comfortably established. Just at this time
te Provisional Congress. Messrs. Johnson, of Tennessee, and Hunter, of Virginia, were appointed as the committee on behalf of the Senate. The Senate went into consideration of the bill (before reported) to provide for vacancies in the office of President and Vice President. After much discussion, the bill was recommitted. The Judiciary Committee submitted a report and substitute for the bill to provide for the pay of deceased soldiers being handed over to relatives Printed. Mr. Browne, of Miss., from the Naval Committee, submitted a report and bill in relation to brevet ranks for Naval officers.&c. Ordered to be printed without reading. Mr. Burnett offered a joint resolution authorizing the joint Committee on Public Buildings to secure a building and offices for the President and for the State Department. The bill to organize a Supreme Court of the Confederate States was taken up. Mr. Semmes moved to postpone the bill.--He did not think the Court was need
Corning, Cox, Cravens, Crittenden, Delaplaine, Dunlop, English, Grider, Hall, Harding, Kerrigan, Knapp, Law Lazear, Leary, Mallory, May, Menzles, Noble, Noell, Norton, Nugen, Pendleton, Perry, Price, Rollins (Mo.), Shiel, Smith, Steele (N. J.), Steele (N. Y.), Thomas (Md.), Vallandigham, Voorhees, Wadsworth, Wade, Webster, White (Ohio), Wickiffe, Woodruff, and Wright. Nays--Messrs. Aldrich, Alley, Arnold, Ashley, Babbitt, Baker, Baxter, Beaman, Bingham, Blair (Mo.), Blair (Pa.), Blake, Browne (R. I.), Buffington, Campbell, Chamberlain, Clark, Colfax, Frederick A. Conkling, Roscoe Conkling, Covode, Davis, Dawes, Delano, Diven, Duell, Dunn, Edgerton, Edwards, Eliot, Fenton, Fessenden, Fisher, Franchor, Frank, Gooch, Goodwin, Granger, Gurley, Haight, Hall, Hanchett, Harrison, Hooper, Horton, Hutchins, Julian, Kelley, Kellogg, (Mich.,) Killinger, Lansing, Lehman, Loomis, Lovejoy, McKnight, McPherson, Mitchell, Morehead, Morrill (Me.,) Morrill (Vt.,) Nixon, Odell, Olin, Patton, Phelps
ived at Chimboads Hospital, May 31st, and June 1st and 2d, 1862.--J. B. McCaw, Surgeon in Chief. Adkins, C. C. co K, 14th Tenn, arm, contused. Adkins, J. G, co A, 24th Va, finger. Adkins, J. O, co E, 38th Va, hand. Armstrong, J. W, co C, 1st Texas. Blanks, T. B, co I, 38th Va, shell wound. Benson, W. E, co C, 14th Tenn, thigh. Bates, N. co G. 38th Va, hand. Boggs, G. W, co G, 6th S C V, arm. Brake, Thos, co F, 14th Tenn, chest. Bland, M L, co F, 7th Tenn, hip. Browne, A J, co K, 6th Ala., leg (flesh.) Boil, F, co K, 1st Tenn, shoulder. Bowars, A, co D, 1st Tenn, hand. Benson, W. E, co C. 14th Tenn, thigh. Beard, W S, co C, 4th N. C, head. Brown, T. M, 1st Lieut, co A, 2d Fla, arm. Boyd, C C, co G, 11th Miss, arm and thigh. Barney, A G, co G, 11th Miss, side and thigh. Barker, J J, co I, 11th Miss, thigh. Blackwell, H C, co I, 7th Va, hand. Boon, J, co A, 6th N. C, back. Bell, D, co F, 11th Miss, wrist. Beckam.--, co A, 1
Va Cavalry; John G Morton, 16th Miss; Ezra Ramsbourg, teamster, Martinsburg. Va. Among the Confederates recently taken to Fort Delaware are Captain S M Somers, Virginia; Capt Beckwith West, Virginia; Lieut S B Samuels, Virginia; Lieut G W Veltch, Virginia; Lieut J F Everly, Virginia; Lieut J H Wright, Virginia; Lieut L M Hottell, Virginia; Lieut C E Bott, Virginia; Lieut J P Oden, Virginia; Capt C S Coffee, Mississippi; Lieut J K Decrow, Louisiana; Lieut E Waterman, Louisiana; Lieut J M Browne, Georgia; Lieut N T Johnson, Georgia; s Wren, Louisianian; J J Dix, Louisiana. The steamer Daniel Webster, Captain Wood, arrived here yesterday with 312 wounded and sick soldiers from the Peninsula, the majority of the former having been disabled during the battles incident to Gen. McClellan's change of position. Vessels libeled for Trading with Virginia. The Baltimore Sun says: The schooner General Taylor, of New York, for Norfolk, J. D. Jones, master, laden with sutler