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Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2 20 0 Browse Search
Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War. 12 0 Browse Search
The Daily Dispatch: December 14, 1863., [Electronic resource] 2 0 Browse Search
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Admiral David D. Porter, The Naval History of the Civil War., Chapter 59: (search)
enry.   Cotton, 139 bales 39,192 93 3,559 67 85,633 26 do Mar. 29, 1864 Hendrick Hudson.   Cotton, 114 bales 42,459 13 2,829 36 39,629 77 do Mar. 29, 1864 De S. Schooner Fannie McRae 4,384 87 293 16 4,091 71 Key West Aug. 12, 1865 Hendrick Hudson. Schooner Florida 8,560 29 645 56 7,914 73 do Aug. 16, 1865 James L. Dara 36,052 92 1,589 90 34,463 02 Key West April 22, 1865 Stars and Stripes, Hendrick Hudson. Sloop Lydia 1,302 17 224 76 1,077 41 do April 22, 1865 Beauregard. s do   Roebuck. Schooner Lucy 5,879 64 341 52 5,538 12 do Aug. 12, 1865 Hendrick Hudson. Brig Lilla 73,679 67 3,929 45 69,750 22 Boston June 20, 1865 Quaker Cisington. Schooner Margaret 378 73 160 95 217 78 do Oct. 6, 1862 Tahoma, Hendrick Hudson. Schooner Martha Ann 1,498 02 714 44 783 58 Washington Oct. 1, 1863 Sam April 26, 1865 Restless. Schooner Wild Pigeon 188 71 81 22 107 49 do   Hendrick Hudson. (Waiting for prize list.) Steamer Wando 415,690 83 6,203 94 409,486 8
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Massachusetts in the Army and Navy during the war of 1861-1865, vol. 2, I. List of officers from Massachusetts in United States Navy, 1861 to 1865. (search)
ass.Mass.Mass.Aug. 31, 1863.Actg. Master's Mate.Hendrick Hudson; Sea Bird.East Gulf.Nov. 27, 1865.Hon. discharg Bell, John R.,--Mass.Jan. 7, 1863.Actg. Ensign.Hendrick Hudson.East Gulf.Oct. 27, 1865.Hon. discharged.Actg. EMass.Mass.Mass.Aug. 31, 1864.Actg. Asst. Paymr.Hendrick Hudson.East Gulf.Nov. 8, 1860.Hon. discharged.Actg. Asigned.Actg. Master. Aug. 9, 1864.Actg. Ensign.Hendrick Hudson; Isonomia.East Gulf.July 29, 1865.Hon. dischargless;East Gulf.July 28, 1866.Discharged.- Ino; Hendrick Hudson. Newbern.Supply Steamer. Holbrook, Eliphalet,tment. --Mass.Nov. 20, 1862.Actg. Master's Mate.Hendrick Hudson.East Gulf.June 30, 1863.Resigned.Actg. Master'sischarged.Actg. Ensign. Dec. 21, 1863.Actg. Ensign.Hudson; Two Sisters. Moody, William, Credit, Charlesto.Apr. 8, 1864.Actg. Master's Mate.St. Lawrence; Hendrick Hudson; Stars and Stripes; Honeysuckle.East Gulf.Dec. ass.Mass.Mass.Oct. 27, 1862.Actg. Master's Mate.Hendrick Hudson.East Gulf.Oct. 11, 1864.Resigned.Mate. White,
Benjamin Franklin, con. Speech upon the campaign before Richmond, 1864, delivered at Lowell, Mass., Jan. 29, 1865. With an appendix: The two attacks on Fort Fisher; Speech on the treatment of the negro, delivered at Boston, Feb. 4, 1865; Speech of Hon. George S. Boutwell in reply to charges of Hon. James Brooks of New York against Gen. Butler, delivered in the House of Representatives, Jan. 24, 1865. Boston, 1865. 88 pp. 8°. — Life and public services. Philadelphia, 1864. 16°. — Hudson, H. N. A chaplain's campaign with Gen. Butler. New York, 1865. 8°. — – Gen. Butler's campaign on the Hudson. 2d ed. With an appendix. Boston, 1883. 8°. — Parton, James. Gen. Butler in New Orleans; with a sketch of the previous career of the general, civil and military. New York, 1864. 12°. Coffin, Charles Carleton. Stories of our soldiers. War reminiscences by Carleton and by soldiers of New England. Collected from the series written especially for the Boston Journa
d horse power, one cylinder of forty inches, and forty-two inch piston. She has always been a popular boat on this route. The Chesapeake carried a crew of about twenty persons, who were, no doubt, so scattered throughout the vessel that they did not have time to collect and retain possession of the steamer. The Navy Department was greatly exercised over this capture. The Agawam, from Portland the Vicksburg, Grand Gulf, Sebago, and Dawn, from New York, and the Ticonderoga and Hendrick Hudson, from Boston, were all to sall on Monday in chase of the daring raiders. Exchange of prisoners — Proceedings in Congress. The Yankee Secretary of War, in his official report, thus sums up his side of the exchange question: As the matter now stands, we have over forty thousand prisoners of war ready at any moment to be exchanged, man for man, and officer for officer, to the number held by the rebels. This number is about thirteen thousand, and they are supplied with food