. The history of Fuller's Ohio brigade, 1861-1865; its great march, with roster, portraits, battle maps and biographies . ealth, he was assigned in November, to the command of the Depart-ment of the Missouri, and he proceeded at mice to restore order. Hequelled a general Indian outbreak, and in Arkansas, General Jeff Thompsonwith eight thousand men surrendered to him. For a year after the war, his command included all the Indian countrywest of the Missouri River and north of the Indian Territory, and he wasin command of the Indian campaigns reaching from the Arkansas to theYellowstone Rivers.


. The history of Fuller's Ohio brigade, 1861-1865; its great march, with roster, portraits, battle maps and biographies . ealth, he was assigned in November, to the command of the Depart-ment of the Missouri, and he proceeded at mice to restore order. Hequelled a general Indian outbreak, and in Arkansas, General Jeff Thompsonwith eight thousand men surrendered to him. For a year after the war, his command included all the Indian countrywest of the Missouri River and north of the Indian Territory, and he wasin command of the Indian campaigns reaching from the Arkansas to theYellowstone Rivers. He resigned July 30th, 1866 and was elected on theRepublican ticket to represent his district in Congress, still continuing hiswork as Chief Engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad, in which he usedhis best energies, lie continued building railroads until 1874 when hewent abroad, and his advice was sought in building the great RussianTrans-continental line through Siberia. General Dodge stands today among the great men of the nation byreason of the fact that his life has been one of signal usefulness to \ GEX. HAVlIi S. STANLEY. MAJOR-GENERAL DAVID S. STANLEY. By Major Charles II. Sm ith. David S. Stanley was born in Wayne County, Ohio, on the 1st ofJune, 1828. In 1848 he was appointed a cadet at West Point and in 1852he graduated and was assigned as Second-Lieutenant to the SecondDragi»ms. The next year he was employed as assistant on the survey ofthe Pacific Railroad Route and in this service he remained for two 1855. he was transferred to the First Cavalry of which Sumner wasColonel, Joe Johnston, Lieutenant-Colonel and Sedgwick, Major. Me wasengaged in maintaining the peace in Kansas until the spring of Colonel Sumner on an expedition against the CheyenneIndians. lie was engaged in a sharp fight on Solomons Fork of theKansas. In 1858 he was engaged in the Utah expedition and crossed theplains to the northern boundary of Texas.


Size: 1273px × 1963px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidhistoryoffullers00smitch