. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . 16.—Millsville or Wentzville, Mo. Losses:Union 7 killed, 1 wounded. Confed. 7killed. 17.— Fulton, Mo. Losses: Union 1 killed, 15wounded. —Scarey Creek, W. Va. Losses: Union9 killed, 38 wounded.—Martinsburg, , 1 wounded. 18.—Blackburns Ford, Va. 2d and 3d Mich., 12th N. Y., Detachmentof 2d U. S. Cav., Battery E 3d U. Confed., 5th, llthN. C, 2d, 3d,7th S. C, 1st, 7th, llth, 17th, 24th Va.,7th La., 13th Miss. Losses: Union 19killed, 38 wounded. Confed.


. The photographic history of the Civil War : thousands of scenes photographed 1861-65, with text by many special authorities . 16.—Millsville or Wentzville, Mo. Losses:Union 7 killed, 1 wounded. Confed. 7killed. 17.— Fulton, Mo. Losses: Union 1 killed, 15wounded. —Scarey Creek, W. Va. Losses: Union9 killed, 38 wounded.—Martinsburg, , 1 wounded. 18.—Blackburns Ford, Va. 2d and 3d Mich., 12th N. Y., Detachmentof 2d U. S. Cav., Battery E 3d U. Confed., 5th, llthN. C, 2d, 3d,7th S. C, 1st, 7th, llth, 17th, 24th Va.,7th La., 13th Miss. Losses: Union 19killed, 38 wounded. Confed. 15 killed,53 wounded. 21.— Bull Run or Manassas, Va. Union, 2dMe., 2d N. H., 2d Vt., 1st, 4th, and 5thMass., 1st and 2d R. I., 1st, 2d. and 3dConn., 8th, llth, 12th, 13th, l6th, 18th,27th, 29th, 31st, 32d, 35th, 38th, and39th N. Y., 2d, StI), 14th, 69th, 71st, and79tli N. Y. Militia, 27tli Pa., 1st, 2d,and 3d Mich., 1st .and 2d Minn., 2d Wis.,1st and 2d Ohio, Detachments of 2d, 3d,and 8th U. S. Regulars, Battalion ofMarines, Batteries D, E, G, and M, 2d Losses: Union 1 Union, 1st Mass., * No record found,[348]. , REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. MAJOR ROBERT ANDERSON AND FAMILY This Federal major of artillery was summoned on April 11, 1861, to surrenderFort Sumter and the property of the government whose uniform he half-past four the following morning the boom of the first gim from FortJohnson in Charleston Harbor notified the breathless, waiting world thatwar was on. The flag had been fired on, and hundreds of thousands of liveswere to be sacrificed ere the echoes of the great guns died away at the end offour years into the sobs of a nation whose best and bravest, North and South,had strewn the many battlefields. No wonder that the attention of the civil-ized world was focussed on the man who provoked the first blow in the great-est conflict the world has ever known. He was the man who handled thesituation at the breaking point. To him the North looked to preserve the


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