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Diary of Gideon Welles, July, 1863
written by Gideon Welles, 1802-1878 (1863); edited by Edgar Thaddeus Welles; in Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy under Lincoln and Johnson, Vol. I (Boston, MA: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1911), 372-372
Sample
written by Gideon Welles, 1802-1878 (1863); edited by Edgar Thaddeus Welles; in Diary of Gideon Welles, Secretary of the Navy under Lincoln and Johnson, Vol. I (Boston, MA: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1911), 372-372
Date Written / Recorded
1863
Field of Study
Letters and Diaries
Content Type
Diary/Memoir/Autobiography
Contributor
Edgar Thaddeus Welles
Author / Creator
Gideon Welles, 1802-1878
Date Published / Released
1911
Publisher
Houghton, Mifflin and Company
Topic / Theme
Politics, Armed forces, Sciences, Intellectual life, Transportation, Law, Health, Relationships, Life styles, Executive cabinets, Secession, Battles, Lines of communication, Telegraph, Military intelligence, Journalists, Diplomatic missions, Crossing enemy lines, Heads of state, Military victories, Political corruption, Ships, Searches and seizures, Military maneuvers, National government, Militar...
Politics, Armed forces, Sciences, Intellectual life, Transportation, Law, Health, Relationships, Life styles, Executive cabinets, Secession, Battles, Lines of communication, Telegraph, Military intelligence, Journalists, Diplomatic missions, Crossing enemy lines, Heads of state, Military victories, Political corruption, Ships, Searches and seizures, Military maneuvers, National government, Military draft, Political favors, Invasions, Smuggling, Death, In-laws, Friendships, Political life, Atlanta Campaign, GA, May-September 1864, Draft Riots, New York, NY, July 13-16, 1863, Battle of Fort Wagner-Morris Island, SC, July 18-September 7, 1863
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Copyright Message
Copyright © 2001, Alexander Street Press LLC.
Subject
Politics, Armed forces, Sciences, Intellectual life, Transportation, Law, Health, Relationships, Life styles, Executive cabinets, Secession, Battles, Lines of communication, Telegraph, Military intelligence, Journalists, Diplomatic missions, Crossing enemy lines, Heads of state, Military victories, Political corruption, Ships, Searches and seizures, Military maneuvers, National government, Militar...
Politics, Armed forces, Sciences, Intellectual life, Transportation, Law, Health, Relationships, Life styles, Executive cabinets, Secession, Battles, Lines of communication, Telegraph, Military intelligence, Journalists, Diplomatic missions, Crossing enemy lines, Heads of state, Military victories, Political corruption, Ships, Searches and seizures, Military maneuvers, National government, Military draft, Political favors, Invasions, Smuggling, Death, In-laws, Friendships, Political life
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Letter from Benjamin Franklin Butler to Edwin McMasters Stanton, October 29, 1862
written by Benjamin Franklin Butler, 1818-1893 (1862); in Private and Official Correspondence of Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, During the Period of the Civil War, vol. 2 (Springfield, MA: Plimpton Press, 1917), 766-767
Sample
written by Benjamin Franklin Butler, 1818-1893 (1862); in Private and Official Correspondence of Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, During the Period of the Civil War, vol. 2 (Springfield, MA: Plimpton Press, 1917), 766-767
Date Written / Recorded
1862
Field of Study
Letters and Diaries
Content Type
Letter
Author / Creator
Benjamin Franklin Butler, 1818-1893
Date Published / Released
1917
Publisher
Plimpton Press
Topic / Theme
Rhetoric, Health, Politics, Intellectual life, Transportation, Leisure time, Armed forces, Writing from field, Quarantines, Diplomats, Correspondence, Ships, International travel, Death, Soldiers, Yellow fever, Epidemics
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2002, Alexander Street Press LLC.
Subject
Rhetoric, Health, Politics, Intellectual life, Transportation, Leisure time, Armed forces, Writing from field, Quarantines, Diplomats, Correspondence, Ships, International travel, Death, Soldiers, Yellow fever, Epidemics
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