The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies

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U.S. Government Printing Office, 1893

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ii ÆäÀÌÁö - Appropriations for continuing such preparation have been made from time to time, and the act approved June 16, 1880, has provided "for the printing and binding, under direction of the Secretary of War, of 10,000 copies of a compilation of the Official Records (Union and Confederate) of the War of the Rebellion, so far as the same may be ready for publication, during the fiscal year...
785 ÆäÀÌÁö - FISK'S EMIGRANT TRAIN. Report of Col. Daniel J. Dill, Thirtieth Wisconsin Infantry. Headquarters Expedition for Belief of Captain Fisk's Emigrant Train for Idaho, Fort Bice, Dak. Ter., October 4, 1864. Captain: I have the honor to report for the information of the general commanding that in...
170 ÆäÀÌÁö - I immediately dismounted and deployed Company G, Second Minnesota Cavalry, who skirmished through the timber and remained in a position to protect the working parties. I commenced by disposing of the various forces so as to destroy with the least delay the vast quantities of goods left in the timber and ravines adjacent to the camp. The men gathered into heaps and burned tons of dried buffalo meat packed in...
131 ÆäÀÌÁö - River system, which virtually blankets the area from the Appalachian Mountains on the east to the Rocky Mountains on the west, and from the Canadian border on the north to the Gulf of Mexico on the south.
143 ÆäÀÌÁö - You can imagine a basin, 600 feet deep and twenty-five miles in width, filled with a number of cones and oven-shaped knolls, of all sizes, from twenty-five to several hundred feet high, sometimes by themselves, sometimes piled up into large heaps on top of each other, in all conceivable shapes and confusion.
141 ÆäÀÌÁö - Indians till we reached the plain between the hills and the mountains. Here large bodies of Indians flanked me. The Second Cavalry drove them from the left. A very large body of Indians collected on my right for a charge. I directed Brackett to charge them. This he did gallantly, driving them in a circle of about three miles to the base of the mountains and beyond my line of skirmishers, killing many of them. The Indians, seeing his position, collected in large numbers on him, but he repelled them,...
133 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... did not come down until very late in the season, and Sully only reached the mouth of Cannon Ball river, at which point he was to establish a strong post, which was to be his depot of supplies, on the 7th of July. He established Fort Rice at that point, distant from Sioux City four hundred and fifty miles, and garrisoned it with five companies of the thirtieth Wisconsin volunteers. The Indians, who had been concentrated on and near the Missouri river about fifty miles above this post, had meantime...
305 ÆäÀÌÁö - A few facts will convey some idea of this warfare carried on by confederate agents here, while the agents abroad of their bloody and hypocritical despotism...
171 ÆäÀÌÁö - I should judge the camp to have numbered 1,400 lodges. I would report that after the work of destruction commenced the Indians carried a white flag on the bluff close to the camp. As I could not interpret the meaning at this particular time, I did not feel called upon to report the fact to you until I had accomplished the object and carried out Order No. 62. I have the honor to be, most respectfully, your obedient servant, RN MCLAREN, Colonel, Second Minnesota Cavalry, Capt.
143 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... another, in all conceivable shapes and confusion. Most of these hills were of a gray clay, but many of a light brick color, of burnt clay; little or no vegetation. Some of the sides of the hills, however, were covered with a few scrub cedars. Viewed in the distance at sunset it looked exactly like the ruins of an ancient city.

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