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Charles Henry. First Lieutenant, 23d Mass. Infantry, Oct. 5, 1861. Resigned (disability), Jan. 9, 1863. Bates, George H. First Lieutenant, 42d Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Juec. 22, 1864. Jones, John. Corporal, 13th Mass. Infantry, July 16, 1861. Mustered out, Jan. 9, 1863. First Lieutenant, 6th Unattached Co. Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., May 4, 186ay 22, 1861. First Lieutenant, Jan. 4, 1862. Captain, May 2, 1862. Discharged (disability), Jan. 9, 1863. Second Lieutenant, 18th Corps d'afrique (afterward 89th U. S. Colored Infantry), Jan. 9, 186Richardson, Loring S. First Lieutenant, 13th Mass. Infantry, July 16, 1861. Mustered out, Jan. 9, 1863. Second Lieutenant, 3d Mass. Heavy Artillery, Apr. 16, 1863; mustered, Apr. 23, 1863. Captai863. Stone, James Kent. Second Lieutenant, 2d Mass. Infantry, Aug. 10, 1862. Resigned, Jan. 9, 1863. Stone, Joel F. Second Lieutenant, 1st Mass. Heavy Artillery, Feb. 9, 1862. Resigned,
. Unassigned, Mar. 15, 1869. Assigned to 11th U. S. Infantry, Dec. 15, 1870. Retired from active service upon his own application, June 26, 1882. Died at Pass Christian, Miss., Jan. 1, 1887. Woods, George Henry. Born in Massachusetts. First Lieutenant, Regimental Quartermaster, 1st Minn. Infantry, Apr. 29, 1861. Captain, Commissary of Subsistence, U. S. Volunteers, Nov. 16, 1861. Lieut. Colonel, Commissary of Subsistence, assigned from Aug. 20, 1862, to Sept. 27, 1862, and from Jan. 9, 1863, to July 3, 1865. Brevet Major, U. S. Volunteers, July 10, 1865. Mustered out, July 11, 1865. Died, Sept. 30, 1884. Woodward, Solomon E. Born in Massachusetts. First Lieutenant, 15th U. S. Infantry, Aug. 5, 1861. Brevet Captain, U. S. Army, Dec. 31, 1862. Brevet Major, Sept. 1, 1864. Captain, 15th U. S. Infantry, Mar. 13, 1865. Transferred to 24th U. S. Infantry, Sept. 21, 1866. Resigned, Sept. 30, 1866. Wright, Edward. Born in Massachusetts. Major, 1st Ill. Cavalry, Sep
. Sergeant, 6th Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Apr. 22, 1861. Mustered out, Aug. 2, 1861. First Lieutenant, 6th Infantry, M. V. M., in service of the U. S., Aug. 31, 1862. Mustered out, June 3, 1863. First Lieutenant, 38th U. S. Colored Infantry. Resigned, Oct. 5, 1865. Pratt, Benjamin Franklin. See General Officers. Pray, William. Sergeant, 29th Mass. Infantry, May 22, 1861. First Lieutenant, Jan. 4, 1862. Captain, May 2, 1862. Discharged (disability), Jan. 9, 1863. Second Lieutenant, 18th Corps d'afrique, afterwards 89th U. S. Colored Infantry, Jan. 9, 1864. Mustered out, Aug. 12, 1864. Preston, Daniel J. First Lieutenant, 35th Mass. Infantry, Aug. 12, 1862. Captain, Sept. 28, 1862. Major, 36th U. S. Colored Infantry, Dec. 6, 1863. Resigned, Aug. 29, 1864. Proctor, George B. Corporal, 25th Mass. Infantry, Sept. 12, 1861. First Lieutenant, 2d N C. Colored Volunteers, afterward 36th U. S. Colored Infantry, July 24, 1863. Captain. Dis
XV. list of books relating to Massachusetts war History during the civil war. Massachusetts State publications. Address of Gov. Andrew To the legislature, Jan. 5, 1861. 8°. To the legislature, Extra session, May 14, 1861. To the legislature, Jan. 3, 1862. To the legislature, Jan. 9, 1863. To the legislature, Nov. 11, 1863. To the legislature, Jan. 8, 1864. To the legislature, Jan. 6, 1865. Correspondence of Gov. Andrew and others relative to the recruiting of troops for the department of New England, 1862. 8° Letter from Gov. Andrew to S. F. Wetmore of Indiana, in answer to the question raised by the popular branch of the legislature of that state, Why Massachusetts has not sent to the field during the present war as many men as have been sent by Indiana. Dated Boston, Feb. 3, 1863. Proceedings in the legislature upon the act of the state of Maryland appropriating $7,000 for the families of those belonging to the 6th Regiment of Mass. V
ing Journal, Nov. 18, 1862, p. 4, col. 3. — Address to Legislature, and editorial comment. Boston Evening Journal, Jan. 9, 1863, p. 1, cols. 5-8; p. 2, cols. 1-4. — Feb., 1863. Letter to citizen of Indiana, detailing the contributions of Massls. 4, 5. — – – Letter giving effects of the campaign on the higher faculties of the soul. Boston Evening Journal, Jan. 9, 1863, p. 4, cols. 6, 7. — – – Letter giving events and situation in Jan., 1863. Boston Evening Journal, Feb. 3, 1863, p.col. 1. — – – Demoralization caused by delay of soldiers' pay; short note; from N. Y. Post. Boston Evening Journal, Jan. 9, 1863, p. 2. col. 6. — Jan. Pay delayed; reasons given by Sec. Chase; address by President Lincoln. Boston Evening Journte from N. Y. Post, about demoralization of the army of the Potomac at date, from that cause. Boston Evening Journal, Jan. 9, 1863, p. 2, col. 6. — – Reasons given by Sec. Chase; address of Pres. Lincoln. Boston Evening Journ
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 14. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Extracts from the diary of Lieutenant-Colonel John G. Pressley, of the Twenty-Fifth South Carolina Volunteers. (search)
centre. A column was then formed of regiments in the same order, and thus passed in review. The contracted dimensions of the field caused the troops to be very much crowded, but on the whole the display was very fine. December 31st.—The regiment embarked to-day on the cars of the Wilmington and Manchester railroad for Charleston. We had a slow trip, but got safely back to Camp Glover, where for more than a week we had a quiet time and a rest from the fatigues of our expedition. January 9, 1863.—At 4 o'clock on the afternoon of to-day orders came directing us to proceed at once to the depot of the Northeastern railroad and again take the cars for Wilmington. Some demonstrations made by the enemy on the North Carolina coast had created the impression that Wilmington was in danger. We got off during the night, and had another slow and tedious trip. The train stopped for hours owing to defective engines. One stoppage was near the plantation of Mr. Wm. M. Kinders, about a mile
Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 22. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Arkansas Post. (search)
action at Arkansas Post, on the 10th and 11th of January, 1863: The brigade was composed of the 6th Texas infantry, Lieutenant-Colonel Anderson, commanding, commanders 27, enlisted 515, aggregate 542; 24th Texas Cavalry (dismounted), Colonel Wilks, commanders 41, enlisted 546, aggregate 587; Arkansas Light Battery (6 guns), Captain Hart, commanders 4, enlisted 79, aggregate 83; Missouri Cavalry, Captain Denson, commanders 2, enlisted 31, aggregate 33. Total present, Friday evening, January 9th, 1863: commanders 107, enlisted 1,690, aggregate 1,797. Late in the afternoon of Friday, the 9th, I received orders to proceed with my command to the rifle pits, a mile and a quarter below the fort. On arriving there a little after dark, the following disposition was made of the brigade, viz: Five companies of infantry, under command of Lieutenant-Colonel Swearengen, 24th Texas (dismounted) Cavalry, and Major Phillips' 6th Texas Infantry, were ordered to take position several hundred yar
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 3. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book II:—--the Mississippi. (search)
to line more soldiers than his adversary beyond Murfreesborough. The Federal government promises him reinforcements. In the mean while, his army, previously designated as the Fourteenth corps, is reorganized, divided into three corps, and called the Army of the Cumberland. Thomas, Mc-Cook, and Crittenden each retains the troops under his respective command, forming the Fourteenth, Twentieth, and Twenty-first corps. General Orders, No. 9, War Department, Adjutant-general's Office, January 9, 1863.—Ed. The positions taken by Bragg are very strong. The great plateau of the Cumberland, forming the échelon farthest west of the Alleghanies, extends southward as far as the thirty-fourth degree of latitude; the Tennessee, after traversing from east to west the first chain of hills, called Waldron's Ridge at the north and Lookout Mountain at the south, hugs the eastern base of the plateau as far as Guntersville, where it winds around its extremity as it flows in a westerly directio
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 3. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book III:—Pennsylvania. (search)
to interfere for the purpose of imposing a mediation. It is true that France had not the courage to follow out the policy it had adopted in regard to Mexico. Taking its wishes for reality, it became so thoroughly convinced of the impending defeat of the North that it deemed it wiser to let the destruction of the Union be accomplished without interference, an essential result of the success which has attended its Transatlantic combinations. Nevertheless, the French despatch of the 9th of January, 1863, was a menace which might be realized at any moment. Let us sum up in a few words the situation of the two adversaries. The South saw her finances ruined, her paper worthless; the conscription and the impressments could alone fill up the ranks of her armies and feed them. The total number of her able-bodied population did not admit of any hope that her effective forces could be increased in the future, while famine threatened to paralyze her military operations. The word famine,
s Court.--The regular monthly term of the Alderman's Court of Husting, commenced yesterday at 11 o'clock in the City Hall. Margaret, a bright mulatto girl, slave of Samuel C. Tardy, was put on trial for causing the death by violence of Frances Dean Tardy, infant daughter of said Samuel C Tardy. Prisoner was defended by B. R. Weliford, Jr. The Court, after hearing the evidence of Drs Philips and Deane, declared the prisoner guilty of murder, and sentenced her to be hung on Friday, January 9th, 1863. E. C. Wortham qualified as Notary Public by giving bond and taking the several oaths required by law. A. W. Richardson was fined $10 for allowing his slave Stephen to go at large and hire himself out, contrary to law. James M. Elmore and John Phelps Dunbar were examined for stealing on the 2d instant, from Ro. Henderson a horse valued at $250, and committed for final trial before Judge Lyons. James McQuade and Charles P. Murrell were set to the bar for examination,