Captains of the Civil War1921 |
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... LINCOLN : WAR STATESMAN VI . LEE AND JACKSON : 1862-3 VII . GRANT WINS THE RIVER WAR : 1863 VIII . GETTYSBURG : 1863 Page 1 66 56 66 84 66 116 • 66 168 64 193 260 66 287 IX . FARRAGUT AND THE NAVY : 1863-4 ་ ་ 307 X. GRANT ATTACKS THE ...
... LINCOLN : WAR STATESMAN VI . LEE AND JACKSON : 1862-3 VII . GRANT WINS THE RIVER WAR : 1863 VIII . GETTYSBURG : 1863 Page 1 66 56 66 84 66 116 • 66 168 64 193 260 66 287 IX . FARRAGUT AND THE NAVY : 1863-4 ་ ་ 307 X. GRANT ATTACKS THE ...
Page 8
... Lincoln's inauguration . Meanwhile , on the eighteenth of February , the greatest of all surrenders had taken place in Texas , where nineteen army posts were handed over to the State by General Twiggs . San Antonio was swarming with ...
... Lincoln's inauguration . Meanwhile , on the eighteenth of February , the greatest of all surrenders had taken place in Texas , where nineteen army posts were handed over to the State by General Twiggs . San Antonio was swarming with ...
Page 11
... Lincoln , delivering his Inaugural on the fourth , brought the country one step nearer war by show- ing the neutrals how impossible it was to reconcile his principles as President of the whole United States with those of Jefferson Davis ...
... Lincoln , delivering his Inaugural on the fourth , brought the country one step nearer war by show- ing the neutrals how impossible it was to reconcile his principles as President of the whole United States with those of Jefferson Davis ...
Page 16
... Lincoln declared a blockade of every port from South Carolina round to Texas . Eight days afterwards he extended it to North Carolina and Virginia . But in the meantime Lincoln had been himself marooned in Washington . On the nineteenth ...
... Lincoln declared a blockade of every port from South Carolina round to Texas . Eight days afterwards he extended it to North Carolina and Virginia . But in the meantime Lincoln had been himself marooned in Washington . On the nineteenth ...
Page 17
... that the Seventh had marched through miles of cheering patriots in New York , and that these two fine regiments were only the vanguard of a host . X X But just a week before Lincoln experienced this 2 THE CLASH : 1861 17.
... that the Seventh had marched through miles of cheering patriots in New York , and that these two fine regiments were only the vanguard of a host . X X But just a week before Lincoln experienced this 2 THE CLASH : 1861 17.
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Common terms and phrases
admirable arms army attack Banks battalion batteries battle Beauregard began blockade Bragg brigade Buell Bull Run campaign cavalry Charleston Chattanooga civil civilian Colonel command Confederate corps Culp's Hill defeat defense enemy Farragut Federal fighting fire flank fleet flotilla Fortress Monroe forts fought Fredericksburg Frémont front garrison Government Grant gunboats guns Halleck hand Harper's Ferry Henry Hill Hooker hundred ironclad Jackson Johnston Kearsarge knew land Lee's Lincoln Longstreet McClellan McClernand McDowell Merrimac miles military Mississippi naval navy never North Northern numbers officers Ohio orders Orleans Pope Port Hudson Potomac raid rails rear reinforcements retreat Richmond river road round sea-power sent Shenandoah Shenandoah Valley Sheridan Sherman ships shot side soldiers South Southern Stanton Stonewall Jackson stood strategic Stuart Sumter supplies surrender Tennessee thousand took troops turned Union armies Union forces Valley vessels Vicksburg victory Washington West Virginia whole