Search using this query type:

Advanced Search (Items only)

Browse Items (42 total)

  • Tags: Military Authority

Amnesty Petition of Daniel Harvey Hill, July 1865

http://history.ncsu.edu/projects/civil.war.era.nc/files/amnesty/DH Hill p1.jpg
Daniel Harvey (D.H.) Hill found himself excluded from Presidential amnesty due to the fact that he had been educated at West Point, and served as Major General in the Confederate Army. Hill highlighted the fact that he had received commendation for…

Amnesty Petition of Henry E. Coleman, August 3, 1865

http://history.ncsu.edu/projects/civil.war.era.nc/files/amnesty/HE Coleman P1.jpg
As much as former Colonel Henry Coleman worked to gain amnesty, he worked to gain sympathy. Coleman explained that he was a veteran of the battles of Gettysburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania and others. He explained "I am very greatly wounded in so much…

"The Land Attack on Wilmington - Defence and Fall of Fort Fisher," Charleston Mercury, January 18, 1865

Charleston Mercury.jpg

THE LAND ATTACK ON WILMINGTON - DEFENCE AND FALL OF FORT FISHER Our community was much depressed yesterday by the news, which reaches here in the forenoon that Fort Fisher, the gate of the Cape Fear River, had succumbed to another tremendous…

Charles M. Robinson III, "Hurricane of Fire" (1998)

Hurricane of Fire.jpg

For four years, Fort Fisher was the Achilles' heel of the Union blockade. As long as it stood, Wilmington would remain open. The odds were overwhelmingly in favor of the blockade-runners that came and went virtually on schedule, openly defying the…

C.R. Woods, Special Orders No. 76 , April 28, 1865

Raleigh Executive Mansion.jpg

SPECIAL ORDERS,
HDQRS. FIRST DIV., 15TH ARMY CORPS, Numbers 76.
Near Raleigh, N. C., April 28, 1865.

* * * * *

V. During the march from Raleigh, N. C., to Washington, D. C., via Richmond, full rations of hard bread or flour, meat, coffee, and…

John Barrett, Sherman's March through the Carolinas (1956)

barrett_shermans.jpg

Sherman's movements through South and North Carolina were bold, imaginative strokes, masterfully executed. One historian has rightly characterized the Carolinas campaign as "a triumph of physical endurance and mechanical skill on the part of the army…

"Wilmington. The Attack on Fort Fisher," New York Times, December 30, 1864

image093.jpg

WASHINGTON, Thursday, Dec. 29. The Secretary of the Navy received this afternoon the following by special messenger: NORTH ATLANTIC SQUADRON, U.S. FLAG SHIP MALVERN, AT SEA, OFF NEW INLET, Monday, Dec. 26, 1864. SIR: I was in hopes that I should…

Absalom Baird, Report of Operations January 20-March 23, March 24, 1865

Baird.JPG

. . . . March 1, division marched twelve miles to Ingraham’s Mills, near Hanging Rock; roads in terrible condition. March 2, passed Little Lynch’s, Lick, and Flat Creeks, through almost impassable roads, and marched fifteen miles. March 3,…

"The Capture of Fort Fisher.; The Lesson of the Guns," The New York Times, February 19, 1865

NYT.jpg

From the London Times, Feb. 1. To the student of the art of war we commend the story of Fort Fisher for its scientific value, and to the general reader for the exceeding interest of the narrative. The fall of this place after a long and terrible…

"Wilmington. Fort Fisher Carried by Assault," The New York Times, January 18, 1865

Fort Fisher Carried by Assault.jpg

WASHINGTON, Tuesday, Jan. 17 -- 10:40 A.M. Maj.-Gen. J.A. Dix: The following official dispatches have just been received at this department: HEADQUARTERS UNITED STATES FORCES ON FEDERAL POINT, N.C., Jan. 15, via FORTRESS MONROE, Jan.…