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Assembly, No. 130. State of New Jersey.
February 14, 1905
New Jersey Assembly
This was an act to erect a monument on the Revolutionary battlefield of Red Bank.
GLC00687.271
to Mr. Farmer
April 14, 1865
Farmer, George E., fl. 1865
George E. Farmer writes to his father that he is in excellent spirits after being present at Confederate General Robert E. Lee's surrender. He discusses the Appomattox Campaign and indicates that he participated in the fighting near Dinwiddie...
GLC00808.01
to Maggie
April 21, 1865
George E. Farmer gives a day by day account of the movements and engagements of his regiment during the Appomattox campaign. He reports that they left Petersburg on March 29, camped at Dinwiddie Courthouse, and fought a skirmish at Hatcher's Run...
GLC00808.02
General orders: No. 211
12 July 1847
Scott, Winfield, 1786-1866
Signed by H.L. Scott. Orders preparing troops for battle, including exercises, uniform, arms, appointments, and reviews.
GLC00911.06
[Diary 1862]
1861-1862
Beach, Elias William, 1841-1921
Autograph manuscript signed. Beach writes the first half of the diary as a civilian. The second half contains a large amount of information about training, camp life, guard duty, and some battle content. Dated November 18. 1861 to March 19, 1862.
GLC00919.23.02
[Diary 1865]
1865
Autograph manuscript signed. Filled with news of military activity. Excerpt from entry for 3 April 1865: "Richmond fell at 8 oclock this morning. Genl Benham was the first Genl in the city... Rebels evacuated. The President and Genl Grant & Meade...
GLC00919.23.06
Union Martyrs
1861-1865
E. & H. T. Anthony
White mount with gold border. Imprint of E. & H.T. Anthony on verso. Collage of 17 Union officers killed in the Civil War, including Reynolds, McPherson, Hayes, Sedgwick, and Stevens.
GLC00919.24.25
to Albert S. Pratt
August 7, 1863
Pratt, Oliver D., fl. 1863-1864
"...thear was heavy firing last night an to day up Charleston way..."
GLC01003.03.01
to his wife
April 5, 1862
Lay, Creed A., fl. 1861-1864
Letter written on patriotic stationary from "Shilow pits burg Landing hardin Co tenn," most likely Shiloh and Pittsburg Landing, in Hardin County, Tennessee. Letter written just before the beginning of the Battle of Shiloh.
GLC01013.09
April 14, 1862
Letter written from "pits burg Landing tenn," most likely Pittsburg Landing, in Tennessee. Letter written just after the Battle of Shiloh.
GLC01013.10
Banquet programme
circa May 1865
Fragment of banquet program, probably for a celebration following the victory of the Civil War. Sherman presided. Poems, songs, and reports given for each army. Verso has illustration of Union flags with lists of victories. On May 24 a Grand...
GLC04195.33
To his wife
19 September 1862
Tillotson, George W., 1830-1918
On the march from Washington. Mentions he saw battle at South Mountain.
GLC04558.043
[Diary of Samuel G. Gottshall] [Incomplete]
1864
Gottshall, Samuel G., 1841-1902
Leather bound manuscript signed. First entry is not logged down until 18 February 1864. On 25 March, he reports that General Ulysses Grant is visiting. Reports on the battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania. Reports of heavy fighting from May...
GLC04564.05
to William Heath
3 January 1778
Burgoyne, John, 1722-1792
Written by Burgoyne, captured British General in charge of the Convention Army to Heath, American General in charge of the district where Convention Army is located. Says Heath made no objection to sending a person to Rhode Island to get money for...
GLC04764.45
to [George Washington?]
February 1778
Henley, David, 1749-1823
Written by Colonel Henley as the former commandant of the Prospect Hill barracks near Cambridge, Massachusetts, which housed the captured British Convention Army. Recipient is inferred from the title "your Excellency" used toward the end of the...
GLC04764.62
to Andrew Johnson
9 August 1862
Morgan, George Washington, 1820-1893
Discusses Union victory by De Courcy's brigade on 6 August 1862. "It is rumored that Kentucky is to be invaded." Written to Johnson as Military Governor of Tennessee.
GLC05045.01
General Nathaniel P. Banks
1861-1865 ca.
Gardner, Alexander, 1821-1882
Bust portait.
GLC05135.002
Silas Casey
Bust portrait.
GLC05135.006
to William Jackson
October 12, 1862
Jackson, Edwin, fl. 1862-1865
Edwin Jackson writes to tell Bill that he and his brother, Henry, enlisted in the Army in August and have been fighting the Dakota Indians. He graphically describes the dead left by the Dakota attacks on settlers, including a German family and a...
GLC00203.01
August 30, 1863
Edwin Jackson mentions four fights with Indians in the Dakota Territory and the army's destruction of their abandoned supplies. He complains of the bad water and hard marching, but assures his brother of his continued health. He tells of the birth of...
GLC00203.07.01
July 14, 1864
Edwin Jackson writes that the troops are in Arkansas, and he often has to stand guard duty; however, he would much rather be in the South and "run the chance of being shot and killed out and out" than be in Dakota "and be killed by degrees." He tells...
GLC00203.13
September 24, 1865
Writing from home, he rejoices about having been part of crushing the rebellion in the South. He talks about how happy his father was to see him home again. He mentions that he was in the last battle in Blakely, Alabama, with his trusty Springfield...
GLC00203.18
to Colonel Julius Walker Adams
September 17, 1878
Porter, Fitz-John, 1822-1901
Discusses convening of the military commission to reevaluate Porter's actions during Second Manassas. Notes that Asa Gardiner, the lawyer opposing Porter in the trial "has notified 'McDowell & Pope that he will take care of their honor.' before the...
GLC00214.02.01
to Captain Julius Walker Adams
February 27, 1879
Discusses a delay in the meeting of the board. Mentions the arguments of John C. Bullitt and Joseph Hodges Choate, his counsels during hearings. Writes "I know nothing of the Board. My relations with it have been entirely of a formal character & I...
GLC00214.02.02
April 19, 1879
Discusses whether President Rutherford B. Hayes will support his case, which had been before a military board, concerning his conduct during the Battle of Second Manassas. Discusses his desire to keep the case separate from politics, and remarks that...
GLC00214.02.04
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