. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . s of theThird Corps, Palmers Brigade of theFourth Corps, and part of RichardsonsDivision of the Second Corps. Confed.,Armisteads brigade. Losses: Union 51killed, 401 wounded, 64 missing. Con-fed. 65 killed, 465 wounded, 11 missing. 36 to 39.—Vicksburg, Miss. U. S. Fleet, un-der command of Commodore Farragut,passed the Confederate land batteries,under the cover of bombardment bv Com-modore Porters fleet of mortar boats. 36 to July 1.—The Seven Days Battles, infront of Richmond, Va., including en-gagements known as Aleclianicsville o
. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . s of theThird Corps, Palmers Brigade of theFourth Corps, and part of RichardsonsDivision of the Second Corps. Confed.,Armisteads brigade. Losses: Union 51killed, 401 wounded, 64 missing. Con-fed. 65 killed, 465 wounded, 11 missing. 36 to 39.—Vicksburg, Miss. U. S. Fleet, un-der command of Commodore Farragut,passed the Confederate land batteries,under the cover of bombardment bv Com-modore Porters fleet of mortar boats. 36 to July 1.—The Seven Days Battles, infront of Richmond, Va., including en-gagements known as Aleclianicsville orEUersons Mills on the 26th, GainesjMills or Cold Harbor on the 27th, Gar-netts and Goldings Farms on the 2Sth,Peach Orchard and Savage Station onthe 29th, White Oak Swamp, also calledCharles Citv Cross Roads, Glendale orNelsons Farm or Fraj^sers Farm, NewMarket Road on the 30th, and AlalvernHill or Crews Farm on July —Army of the Potomac, ^ Geo. B. !McClellan : First Corjjs, Geo. A. * No record ). BRIGADIER-GENERALNATHANIEL LYON made brigadier-gener;il, andGovernor Jackson, calling forfifty thousand troops to repelthe invasion of tlie State lefttlie capital for Booneville,June 14th. Lyon followed,dispersed the militia on the17th, and otlier Confederatetroops, under McCulloch, atDug Springs, on August he had sent Sigelwith twelve hundred men intosouthwestern Missouri, and onJuly oth that intrei)id leader These fearless leaders hy their pronijjt anddaring actions at the outbreak of the ^\arkept Missouri within the Union. CaptainNathaniel Lyon, U. S. A., a veteran of theMexican War, had been on duty in Kansasduring the free soil riots and knew whatit was to see a State torn by dissension. Atthe outbreak of the war he was in commandof the United States arsenal at St. Sigel, a Prussian refugee, had settledm St. Louis in 1858, and in May, 1861, raisedthe Union Third Missouri Infantry and be-came i
Size: 1255px × 1991px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthormillerfrancistrevelya, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910