| United States. Congress. Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War - 1865 - 574 pages
...to Augusta, as its permanent garrison. Another brigade of infantry was ordered to occupy Orangeburg, South Carolina, the point furthest in the interior...future state. Anything at all would be preferable to thia dread uncertainty. "On the evening of the 2d of May I returned to Hilton Head, and there, for... | |
| 1865 - 594 pages
...At Savannah I found the city in the most admirable police, under direction of Brevet Major-General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...political conditions to be attached to their future state. Any tiling at all would be preferable to this dread uncertainty. On the evening of the 2d of May I... | |
| George Ward Nichols - 1865 - 414 pages
...At Savannah I found the city in the most admirable police, under direction of Brevet Major General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...political conditions to be attached to their future state. Any thing at all would be preferable to this drend uncertainty. On the evening of the 2d of May I returned... | |
| 1865 - 576 pages
...ordered to occupy Oraugeburg, South Carolina, the point furthest in the interior that can at present bo reached by rail from the sea-coast, (Charleston.)...concerned, the war was over. All classes, Union men us well as former rebels, did not conceal however, the apprehensions naturally arising from a total... | |
| William Tecumseh Sherman - 1865 - 220 pages
...At Savannah I found the city in the most admirable police, tinder direction of brevet Major-General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...All classes, Union men as well as former rebels, did dot conceal, however, the apprehensions naturally arising from a total ignorance of the political conditions... | |
| BREVET MAJOR GEORGE WARD NICHOLS - 1865 - 404 pages
...At Savannah I found the city in the most admirable police, under direction of Brevet Major General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...was over. All classes, Union men as well as former Eebels, did not conceal, however, the apprehensions naturally-arising from a total ignorance of the... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate - 1865 - 588 pages
...furthest in the interior that can at present be reached by rail from the sea-coast, (Charleston.) Graver, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified joy to hear that, so far as they were roncerned, the war was over. All classes, Union men as well as former rebels, did not conceal, however,... | |
| Phineas Camp Headley - 1866 - 794 pages
...At Savannah I found the city in the roost admirable police, under direction of Brevet Major-General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...political conditions to be attached to their future state. Any thing at all would be preferable to this dread uncertainty. On the evening of the 2d of May I returned... | |
| 1865 - 598 pages
...admirable police, under direction of Brevet Major-General Grover, and the citizens manifested the moat unqualified joy to hear that, so far as they were...political conditions to be attached to their future -talc. Any thing at all would be preferable to this dread uncertainty. On the evening of the 2d of... | |
| Linus Pierpont Brockett - 1866 - 316 pages
...At Savannah, I found the city in the most admirable police, under direction of brevet Major General Grover, and the citizens manifested the most unqualified...apprehensions naturally arising from a total ignorance of tho political conditions to be attached to their future state. Any thing at all would b« preferable... | |
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