. The photographic history of the civil . group like GrenvilleM. Dodge, Harrison Gray Otis, and Thomas T. Eckert, whohelped to develop American material resources; together withseveral, such as Henry Watterson, Carl Schurz, George , and Francis A. Walker, whose influence has putmuch of our journalism and public life on a higher plane. As these lines are penned, no less than four Civil War sol-diers—two Union, two Confederate—are serving as membersof the highest American tribunal—the Supreme Court:—ChiefJustice White and Justice Lurton (Confederate) ; JusticesHarlan and Holme


. The photographic history of the civil . group like GrenvilleM. Dodge, Harrison Gray Otis, and Thomas T. Eckert, whohelped to develop American material resources; together withseveral, such as Henry Watterson, Carl Schurz, George , and Francis A. Walker, whose influence has putmuch of our journalism and public life on a higher plane. As these lines are penned, no less than four Civil War sol-diers—two Union, two Confederate—are serving as membersof the highest American tribunal—the Supreme Court:—ChiefJustice White and Justice Lurton (Confederate) ; JusticesHarlan and Holmes (Union). Ex-Confederates again havebeen found in the cabinets of both Republican and DemocraticPresidents, as well as in the National Congress. But immense indeed would be the literary enterprise un-dertaking to cover all the results in American civic life of CivilWar training. There have been State governors by the hun-dreds who could look back upon service with the have been members of legislatures by the tens of thou-. WAR-TIME POR-TRAITS OF FEDERALSOLDIERS WHO CON-TRIBUTED TO THEPHOTOGRAPHICHISTORY HALF ACENTURY LATER Captain A. W. Greely, 1863; Later Gen., U. S. A.; Chief Signal Service (Signals; TelegraphJ.


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Keywords: ., bookauthormillerfrancistrevelya, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910