Major General Ambrose E. Burnside and the Ninth Army Corps: A Narrative of Campaigns in North Carolina, Maryland, Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee, During the War for the Preservation of the RepublicS.S. Rider & Brother, 1867 - 554 strani |
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Zadetki 1–5 od 58
Stran 33
... communicate . When General Burnside arrived , General Williams sent Tom on board the flag ship . General Burnside had a long interview with the escaped slave . Tom knew all about Roanoke and the forts and forces there . There was one ...
... communicate . When General Burnside arrived , General Williams sent Tom on board the flag ship . General Burnside had a long interview with the escaped slave . Tom knew all about Roanoke and the forts and forces there . There was one ...
Stran 34
... communication with Hampton Roads . To protect this important place , the enemy had erected no less than five earthworks of different size , and defended , for the most part , by heavy ordnance . Three of these were built at different ...
... communication with Hampton Roads . To protect this important place , the enemy had erected no less than five earthworks of different size , and defended , for the most part , by heavy ordnance . Three of these were built at different ...
Stran 69
... communications with the enemy respecting the late contest , the settlement of affairs in the city and the inaugura- tion of a new order of things occupied considerable time . The position required to be fortified to some extent , to ...
... communications with the enemy respecting the late contest , the settlement of affairs in the city and the inaugura- tion of a new order of things occupied considerable time . The position required to be fortified to some extent , to ...
Stran 85
... communications uniting Virginia with the Gulf States . It was the most difficult port on the coast to blockade , and it thus became the enemy's greatest entrepot for smuggled goods . Were our troops in possession of that point , the ...
... communications uniting Virginia with the Gulf States . It was the most difficult port on the coast to blockade , and it thus became the enemy's greatest entrepot for smuggled goods . Were our troops in possession of that point , the ...
Stran 86
... communication and supplies for General McClellan's army , then operating on the peninsula , prevented the Flag Officer ... communications at either or both of those points ? It was possi- ble under certain conditions , but not otherwise ...
... communication and supplies for General McClellan's army , then operating on the peninsula , prevented the Flag Officer ... communications at either or both of those points ? It was possi- ble under certain conditions , but not otherwise ...
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advance Aquia Creek army artillery assault attack battery battle battle of Fredericksburg brave brevet brevet Brigadier brevet Colonel brevet Major bridge brigade Brigadier General Vols Burnside Burnside's camp campaign Captain Captain Spaulding captured cavalry column command Creek crossing defences division duty East Tennessee enemy enemy's line engaged eral Ferrero fight fire flank force ford forward Fredericksburg front gallant Grant guns Halleck Hartranft headquarters hundred immediately infantry intrenchments Joined the Corps July Kentucky killed Knoxville Lieutenant Colonel loss Massachusetts McClellan Meade ment miles military morning move movement Newbern night Ninth Corps North Carolina o'clock occupied officers Ohio operations Parke Pennsylvania Petersburg ponton position Potomac Potter prisoners railroad Rappahannock rear rebel reënforcements regiment Reno retreat Rhode Island Richmond river road Roanoke Island Rosecrans Second Lieutenant sent Sept side skirmishers soldiers success tion troops Virginia Warrenton Washington Willcox wounded