Annual Reports of the War Department, Volume 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 1895 |
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Page 5
... companies and regiments ...... .. Enlisted men in detachments and unassigned to regiments .. Total authorized under act June 18 , 1874 Enlisted men , hospital corps , act March 1 , 1887 Total all enlisted men . 23 , 820 1 , 180 25,000 ...
... companies and regiments ...... .. Enlisted men in detachments and unassigned to regiments .. Total authorized under act June 18 , 1874 Enlisted men , hospital corps , act March 1 , 1887 Total all enlisted men . 23 , 820 1 , 180 25,000 ...
Page 8
... companies be added to each of the twenty - five infantry regiments , so that each shall consist of three battalions of four companies , and that two foot batteries be added to each of the five artillery regiments . No increase in the ...
... companies be added to each of the twenty - five infantry regiments , so that each shall consist of three battalions of four companies , and that two foot batteries be added to each of the five artillery regiments . No increase in the ...
Page 9
... companies being improvised in the different garrisons . By restoring to the military establishment the strength allowed up to 1874 , and providing for the battalion formation , with a few minor changes , the organization of the Army ...
... companies being improvised in the different garrisons . By restoring to the military establishment the strength allowed up to 1874 , and providing for the battalion formation , with a few minor changes , the organization of the Army ...
Page 10
... companies of 500 men , making an aggregate of 27,850 of all arms , and a sufficient number remaining for the hospital corps , noncommissioned staff , ord- nance detachment , Indian scouts , and other unattached men , to make a total of ...
... companies of 500 men , making an aggregate of 27,850 of all arms , and a sufficient number remaining for the hospital corps , noncommissioned staff , ord- nance detachment , Indian scouts , and other unattached men , to make a total of ...
Page 68
... companies of the regiments should be together rather than be at isolated stations . CAVALRY . The difficulty of concentrating cavalry regiments has been very great heretofore on account of the necessity of their being scattered to pro ...
... companies of the regiments should be together rather than be at isolated stations . CAVALRY . The difficulty of concentrating cavalry regiments has been very great heretofore on account of the necessity of their being scattered to pro ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres Act July amount appropriation Ariz Army Arsenal article of war Artillery August average Barracks battery Board Board of Ordnance brick buildings cadets camp Capt carriage cavalry ceded to United cent charge commanding companies condition corps courts-martial Davids Island Deaths Department of Dakota disbursements Discharges diseases drainage drill duty ended June 30 Engineers examination expenses fever Fort Bliss Fort Leavenworth Fort Riley Fort Sheridan Fort Yellowstone Fortification garrison Harbor headquarters hospital Indian Infantry inspection instruction Island June 30 Jurisdiction ceded Leavenworth Lieut longitude malarial mean strength ment miles Military Academy month mortar Nebr Noneffective Officers Enlisted Ordnance Post-office pounds practice purchase Quartermaster's Department quarters R. R. stn received recommended regiments repairs reservation River September sergeant soldiers Subsistence surgeon telegraph station tion troops United States Army United States Military Washington Water supplied West Point
Popular passages
Page 331 - For construction of quarters for hospital stewards at military posts already established and occupied, including the extra-duty pay of enlisted men employed on the same, seven thousand dollars.
Page 145 - Except as otherwise expressly provided by law, the general laws of the United States as to the punishment of offenses committed in any place within the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, except the District of Columbia, shall extend to the Indian country.
Page 143 - And every Indian born within the territorial limits of the United States to whom allotments shall have been made under the provisions of this act, or under any law or treaty, and every Indian born within the territorial limits of the United States...
Page 143 - That upon the completion of said allotments, and the patenting of the lands to said allottees, each and every member of the respective bands or tribes of Indians to whom allotments have been made shall have the benefit of and be subject to the laws; both civil and criminal, of the State or Territory in which they may reside...
Page 875 - SIR: in compliance with your instructions, I have the honor to submit the following report of the...
Page 844 - February twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, and for the necessary traveling expenses of said member when traveling on duty as contemplated in said Act; for the payment of the necessary expenses of the board, including a per diem allowance to each officer detailed to serve thereon, when employed on duty away from his permanent station, of two dollars...
Page 653 - Visitors to inquire into the actual state of the discipline, instruction, police administration, fiscal affairs, and other concerns of the Academy. The visitors appointed by the President shall report thereon to the Secretary of War, for the information of Congress...
Page 845 - ... be made for a further supply of not less than fifty, and not more than one hundred, at such reasonable cost as the Board herein provided for shall determine, not to exceed six thousand five hundred dollars each. The entire number to be delivered iu one year from date of contract. Said mortar and all which may be contracted for under this provision shall be subject to inspection at each stage of manufacture.
Page 844 - Board to make all needful and proper purchases, experiments, and tests to ascertain, with a view to their utilization by the Government, the most effective guns, small arms, cartridges, projectiles, fuses, explosives, torpedoes, armor plates...
Page 268 - Department, furniture, text-books, papers, and equipment for post schools, reading matter for post libraries, wagons, ambulances, carts, saddles, harness, water supply, sewerage, plumbing, illuminating supplies, and heating for all military posts and buildings. The Department is also charged with the duty of...