Browsing named entities in Rebellion Record: a Diary of American Events: Documents and Narratives, Volume 1. (ed. Frank Moore). You can also browse the collection for E. D. Morgan or search for E. D. Morgan in all documents.

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glorious constitution as framed and cemented by those who were the framers of this great and mighty Union. The speaker concluded amid rounds of applause. The Chairman here came forward and said he had received a telegraphic despatch from Governor Morgan, which he would read to the meeting. Mr. Charles H. Russell also presented himself to the meeting, and stated that he had received a telegraphic message from Governor Morgan calling upon them to supply four additional regiments, and two aGovernor Morgan calling upon them to supply four additional regiments, and two also of volunteers. The Chairman read another telegraphic despatch, which stated that the Seventh regiment had reached Philadelphia in safety; that they were on their way to Annapolis, and would proceed from thence at once to Washington, not touching at all at Baltimore. This intelligence was received with deafening plaudits. Mr. Chittenden's speech. fellow-citizens and fellow-countrymen — My name was not on the programme of this great meeting as a speaker, and consequently I have no r
r, (vacant); Quartermaster, A Garrison; Paymaster, Boyd; Surgeon, Chase; Chaplain, The Rev. Mr. Lee; Commissary, Street; Sergeant-Major, J. H. Rosenquest; Quartermaster's Sergeant, Vail; Sergeant-of-the-Guard, Cheshire; Commissary Sergeant, Wetmore; Ordinance Sergeant, Carpenter; Right General Guide, Sherman; Left General Guide, Nash; Assistant Surgeon, Allingham; Colonel's Secretary, Brockway. Company Officers — A, Capt. Sullivan, Lieut. Mead; B, Capt. Sprague, Lieuts. Hay and McKee; C, Capt. Morgan, Lieut. Dodge; D, Capt. Balsden, Lieuts. Strong and Bennett; E, Capt. Jones, Lieut. Richards; F, Capt. Betts, Lieuts. Morton and Betts; G, Capt, Thorne, Lieuts. Johnson and Woodward. Engineer Corps, Sergeant Briggs. Company F, is composed exclusively of firemen, attached to Victory Engine Company No. 13, and a very hardy set of men they are. Their uniforms consist of felt hats, black fire coats, drab pants and red shirts. Their muskets are most formidable-looking weapons. The dress o
Doc. 209.-New York and Georgia. Interesting correspondence. New York, May 13, 1861. To His Excellency, E. D. Morgan, Governor of the State of New York: Sir:--By proclamation dated 26th day of April last, Joseph E. Brown, Governor of the State of Georgia, sets forth and declares that property of the citizens of Georgia, Angelis, Cashier of Mechanics' Bank, New York, Jas. M. Morrison, President of Manhattan Bank. J. E. Williams, President of Metropolitan Bank. Reply of Governor Morgan. State of New York, Executive Department, Albany, N. Y., May 18, 1861. gentlemen: I have received your communication of the 13th inst., formally denyiy shall have been allayed, no one will have the courage to plead it as a reason for disregarding his obligations. I have the honor to be, Very respectfully yours, E. D. Morgan. To John A. Stevens, Esq., President Bank of Commerce, George S. Coe, President of the American Exchange Bank, and others. --N. Y. Times, May 28.
command in the order which I desired to move it forward, and after it was so formed I found it almost impossible to pass from front to rear to direct the command. The order of march was as follows:--First, a small detachment of twenty men of Captain Morgan's company, Seventh Regiment Indiana volunteers, under the immediate command of Lieutenant Benjamin Ricketts, followed at the distance of four hundred yards by Company A of said regiment, under the command of Captain Burgess. In order of that, in good order, and with an energy and determination that assured me in advance that victory was certain. In a moment I was at the mouth of the bridge; one of the passages was barricaded, the other clear; through it (Company B, commanded by Captain Morgan, in advance,) my men pushed; the Seventh Indiana first, then Colonel Steedman's command, not including the artillery, then Colonel Crittenden's, and opened upon the enemy, then retreating in wild disorder. Both parties being upon the full ru
ny compromise, but by the enforcement of the laws. As a Lincoln suppressed the first rebellion, so will a Lincoln suppress the last. You will readily call to mind other similar occasions, where the Federal Government, by prompt action, maintained its supremacy unimpaired. First came the whiskey rebellion in Pennsylvania, during the administration of Washington, to suppress which the President called out fifteen thousand men from three different States, led by their Governors and General Morgan, whom Washington at first proposed himself to accompany across the Alleghanies. Next President Jefferson crushed in the bud the opening conspiracy of Aaron Burr. President Madison, during the war of 1812, when doubts were entertained of the loyalty of the Hartford conventionists, who were falsely reported to be in correspondence with the enemy, stationed Major Jessup, of Kentucky, at Hartford, with a regiment, to suppress any sudden outbreak. Gen. Jackson, about the same time, in