. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . COPYRIGHT, 1911, REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. THE RAILROAD MORTAR by the engineers, strengthened by additional beams, tied strongly by iron rods and covered with iron-plating. This enabled the Dictator to be used at various points, and during the siege it fired in all forty-five rounds—nineteen of which were fired duringthe battle of the Crater. It was given at last a permanent emplacement near Batterj No. 4—shown on the following REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. THE DICTATORS OF THE DICTATOR^ Here are the men who did the thinking for the gr


. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . COPYRIGHT, 1911, REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. THE RAILROAD MORTAR by the engineers, strengthened by additional beams, tied strongly by iron rods and covered with iron-plating. This enabled the Dictator to be used at various points, and during the siege it fired in all forty-five rounds—nineteen of which were fired duringthe battle of the Crater. It was given at last a permanent emplacement near Batterj No. 4—shown on the following REVIEW OF REVIEWS CO. THE DICTATORS OF THE DICTATOR^ Here are the men who did the thinking for the great mortar that rests so stolidh in the midst of the group. They are its cabinetministers, artillerymen every one, versed in the art of range-finding and danger-angles, of projectory arcs and the timing of the front line the two figures from left to right are Colonel H. L. Abbott, First Connecticut Hea^y Artillery, and General H. , Chief of Artillery. In the second, or rear line, also from left to right, the first is Captain F. A. Pratt; second (just beliindColonel Abbott), Captain E. C. Dow; fourth (just behind and to General Hunls left), Major T. S. TnmibuU. >Ji&^.«j|&^_ , e d mir^Kj J ■« ^agf^ jy^ii Lr:^. ^mmS^m^ r^ A PERM.\NEXT POSITION


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Keywords: ., bookauthormillerfrancistrevelya, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910