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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Colonel Theodore Lyman, With Grant and Meade from the Wilderness to Appomattox (ed. George R. Agassiz). Search the whole document.
Found 17 total hits in 11 results.
Bermuda Hundred (Virginia, United States) (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
Tony Butler (search for this): chapter 6
Robert Lee (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
Ulysses Simpson Grant (search for this): chapter 6
Baldy Smith (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
J. F. Rhodes (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
George Gordon Meade (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
Theodore Lyman (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
June 17th (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]
June 18th (search for this): chapter 6
V. Manoeuvres about Petersburg
[ if we only could have been a little quicker and more driving, we might have had Petersburg at a mouthful, wrote Lyman some days after the Army of the Potomac had crossed the James.
The strategy of Grant had deceived Lee, who failed to divine the movement, and did nothing therefore to impede it.
Rhodes, IV, 488.
Butler, in command of the Army of the James, was encamped at Bermuda Hundred.
Grant ordered him to advance and capture Petersburg.
But Butler did not rise to the occasion; he sent only part of his forces, under Baldy Smith, who had reinforced Butler, which captured some strong outer fortifications but which did not advance on the city, although it was feebly garrisoned.
When Grant and Meade arrived, the town had been reinforced.
The attacks of June 16, 17, and 18 were repulsed with great loss to the Union forces.
No new assaults were ordered, and the investment of Petersburg began.]