Memoirs of the Confederate War for Independence, Том 1W. Blackwood and Sons, 1866 |
З цієї книги
Результати 1-5 із 23
Сторінка 10
... distant . Our furnaces were fed with the anthracite coal of America , which emits but little smoke to arrest the notice of blockaders ; yet we proceeded very cautiously at half - speed , until we arrived within fifty miles by chart of ...
... distant . Our furnaces were fed with the anthracite coal of America , which emits but little smoke to arrest the notice of blockaders ; yet we proceeded very cautiously at half - speed , until we arrived within fifty miles by chart of ...
Сторінка 34
... miles distant , inhabited only by an old man named Waddle . This place , standing at some dis- tance from the highroad , was surrounded by copses and thickets , and afforded us a capital opportunity of recovering from our fatigues . We ...
... miles distant , inhabited only by an old man named Waddle . This place , standing at some dis- tance from the highroad , was surrounded by copses and thickets , and afforded us a capital opportunity of recovering from our fatigues . We ...
Сторінка 36
... miles distant , and near one of the enemy's camps . So the General and I were obliged ourselves to undertake this dangerous expedition , and with the first glimmer of daylight we mounted our horses and cautiously set off . The peculiar ...
... miles distant , and near one of the enemy's camps . So the General and I were obliged ourselves to undertake this dangerous expedition , and with the first glimmer of daylight we mounted our horses and cautiously set off . The peculiar ...
Сторінка 53
... miles distant from Richmond and ten or twelve miles east of Mechanicsville , the enemy , to the number of 60,000 men , had taken a new position , strengthened by natural as well as artificial fortifica- tions . Jackson had with him in ...
... miles distant from Richmond and ten or twelve miles east of Mechanicsville , the enemy , to the number of 60,000 men , had taken a new position , strengthened by natural as well as artificial fortifica- tions . Jackson had with him in ...
Сторінка 79
... distant from our battery . pieces thundered all together , and kept up an inces- sant discharge . The effect on the ... mile nearer to our encampment , when , to our amusement , the enemy , with his ponderous 100 - pounder guns ...
... distant from our battery . pieces thundered all together , and kept up an inces- sant discharge . The effect on the ... mile nearer to our encampment , when , to our amusement , the enemy , with his ponderous 100 - pounder guns ...
Інші видання - Показати все
Загальні терміни та фрази
advance arms arrived artillery attack batteries battle battle-field Boonsboro Bower brigade bullets camp cannon Captain Fitzhugh captured Charlestown Colonel column command Confederate corps couriers Court-house darkness encamped enemy enemy's cavalry escape escort excitement expedition favourable Federal army Federal cavalry fell fight fire Fitz Lee Fitzhugh Lee forward Fredericksburg galloped Gordonsville grey grey squirrel guns halted hands Hanover Hanover County Harper's Ferry headquarters heavy horse-artillery horsemen horses infantry J. E. B. STUART Jackson James river ladies large number Lee's Longstreet M'Clellan Malvern Hill Martinsburg miles distant military morning negro neighbourhood night o'clock officers Pamunkey passed pickets pieces of artillery Poolesville position Potomac prisoners rapid reached received orders regiment retreat Richmond ride river road rode saddle scene sent shell Shepherdstown shot side soldiers soon squadron Staff Stuart tents tion tirailleurs town troops turnpike waggons Warrenton whole wounded Yankees
Популярні уривки
Сторінка 304 - ... torn from their homes, and confined in dungeons in the North. One or two of my men lost their way, and are, probably in the hands of the enemy.* The results of this expedition in a moral and political point of view can hardly be estimated, and the consternation among property -holders in Pennsylvania was beyond description.
Сторінка 226 - M'Clellan's own statement, amounting to not less than 90,000. Our force had been greatly reduced by the continuous fighting of the campaign, by the long and wearisome marches it had made, and the cruel hardships it had undergone. From these several causes it had happened that a great multitude of stragglers were left behind on the Virginia side of the Potomac, of whom thousands had been collected together in the immediate neighbourhood of Leesburg alone. I could not help expressing to General Stuart,...
Сторінка 302 - Poolesville. I ordered the charge, which was responded to in handsome style by the advance squadron (Irving's) of Lee's brigade, which drove back the enemy's cavalry upon the column of infantry advancing to occupy the crest from which the cavalry were driven. Quick as thought Lee's sharpshooters sprang to the ground, and engaging the infantry skirmishers, held them in check till the artillery in advance came up, which, under the gallant Pelham, drove back the enemy's force upon his batteries beyond...
Сторінка 299 - I did not reach this point till after dark in a rain. I did not deem it safe to defer the attack till morning; nor was it proper to attack a place full of women and children without summoning it first to surrender. I accordingly sent in a flag of truce and found no military or...
Сторінка 302 - White's ford to force my way across before the enemy at Poolesville and Monocacy could be aware of my design. Although delayed somewhat by about 200 infantry, strongly posted in the cliffs over the ford ; yet they yielded to the moral -effect of a few shells before engaging our sharpshooters, and the crossing of the canal, now dry, and river was effected with all the precision of passing a defile on drill — a section of artillery being sent with the advance and placed in position on the...
Сторінка 28 - ... daring emprise, his energy in the campaign and obstinacy in the fight, and his strict obedience to orders, made him one of the most useful, as he was always among the most conspicuous, officers in the Confederate service, and gained him the full confidence of the army and its commanding general, Robert E. Lee, who used to call him his war-horse. Longstreet's soldiers were perfectly devoted to him, and I have frequently heard friendly contentions between officers and men of his corps, and those...
Сторінка 303 - Unoffending persons were treated with civility, and the inhabitants were generous in proffers of provisions on the march. We seized and brought over a large number of horses, the property of citizens of the United States. " The valuable information obtained in this reconnoissance as to the distribution of the enemy's force was communicated orally to the Commanding General, and need not be here repeated. A number of public functionaries and prominent citizens were taken...
Сторінка 213 - Dismount, gentlemen, dismount, if your lives are dear to you! the enemy is within fifty yards of us; I am expecting their attack every moment; oh! my dear Stuart, that I should live to experience such a disaster! what can be done ? what can save us...
Сторінка 291 - Stuart's high regard, a new and very " stunning" uniform coat, which had just arrived from the hands of a Eichmond tailor. The garment, neatly wrapped up, was borne on the pommel of his saddle by one of our couriers who accompanied me; and starting at once I reached the simple tent of our great general just in time for dinner. I found him in his old weather-stained coat, from which all the buttons had been clipped long since by the fair hands of patriotic ladies, and which, from exposure to sun and...
Сторінка 292 - But I protested energetically against his summary disposition of the matter of the coat, deeming my mission, indeed, but half executed, and remarked that Stuart would certainly ask me how the uniform fitted its owner, and that I should, therefore, take it as a personal favour if he would put it on. To this he readily assented with a smile, and, having donned the garment, he escorted me outside the tent to the table where dinner had been served in the open air. The whole of the staff were in a perfect...